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Aluminum nears four-year peak on Middle East supply concerns

Aluminum prices reached their highest level in almost four years on Thursday, as fears of a tighter supply for 'Europe and other areas' grew. The Middle East conflict is disrupting shipments through the Strait of Hormuz.

The benchmark three-month aluminum on the London Metal Exchange increased 0.6% by 1111 GMT to $3,478.50 per metric ton after reaching $3,546.5. This was its highest level since late March 2022.

The Middle East war has disrupted the deliveries of alumina and other raw materials to aluminium producers in the region.

Norsk Hydro, a Norwegian company, announced on Thursday that its Qatalum aluminum smelter is in Qatar would stop the curtailment begun last week. Production will be maintained at 60% capacity with reduced gas supply.

Hydro said it is working to minimize the effects of the curtailment.

The rising price of oil is another concern for aluminum producers, as it can account for 40% to 45% in some areas of the cost to melt aluminium. International Energy Agency reported on Thursday that the war in the Middle East has caused the largest oil supply disruption ever.

Alastair Muuro, senior base-metals strategist at broker Marex said that the current "short gamma" market profile contributed to the "scale of price movements in aluminium". This is a situation where option dealers sell during market declines, and buy during rallies.

He added that "these option?shorts" are also contributing to the violent intraday swings.

Copper fell 0.1% among other LME metals to $13,032 per ton. Munro stated that China, the world's largest metal consumer, "has not been active in the copper bid."

Nickel added 0.1% and tin 0.8%. Zinc remained at $3,310.50. Lead rose by 0.4% to $2,943.50. Tin gained 0.8%, reaching $49,320. (Reporting and editing by Diti Pjara; Polina Devtt)

(source: Reuters)