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Aluminum gains continue despite supply concerns amid Mideast conflict

Aluminum prices continued to rise on?Thursday. They were boosted by lingering fears about a tightening of global?supply in the midst of the Middle?East Conflict that shows?no sign?of easing.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most traded aluminium contract closed the daytime trading up 0.38% to 25,240 yuan (US$3,669.56) a metric tonne. The benchmark three-month aluminum contract on the London Metal Exchange rose 1.32%, to $3,502.50 per ton. This is close to a four-year high of $3,544 that was reached earlier this week. Supply fears have been sparked by the war in the Middle East. This?region accounts for around 9 percent of global aluminum supply. U.S. and Iran are not rushing to end their war. U.S. president Donald Trump said it was "necessary" to complete the job. Iran warned that the world would be prepared for oil priced at $200 per barrel if they hit tankers and other vessels near the Strait of Hormuz.

?ING analysts stated in a report that the situation is unstable and aluminium remains highly sensitive to geopolitical headlines, keeping volatility high. Commodity traders Mercuria have cancelled or earmarked to deliver nearly 100,000 tons aluminium at?LME approved warehouses in Port Klang in Malaysia On Monday. The analysts at Benchmark Mineral Intelligence raised their price forecasts for aluminium to $3,100 per ton in 2026 from $2,900 as recent developments increased the likelihood of an even more severe supply squeeze.

Other SHFE metals, such as copper, lead, tin, zinc, and?nickel, all fell 0.49%. Meanwhile,?nickel rose 0.59%. Copper slipped 0.23% on the LME, while?nickel fell 0.27%. Lead edged up 0.8%, tin increased by 0.9% and zinc rose 0.32%.

(source: Reuters)