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Weekly gain is driven by the Mideast war, not aluminium.

Aluminum fell on Friday as the dollar gained strength, but shipping disruptions due to the ongoing Middle East conflict kept it on track for a weekly rise.

Open outcry official activity showed that benchmark three-month aluminum?on London Metal Exchange was?down by 0.9% to $3,485.50 a metric ton. The metal was set to finish the week with a 1.3% gain after reaching a near four-year high Thursday. Last week, the metal jumped 10%.

Tom Price, Panmure Liberum's analyst, said that the dollar was "the biggest mover." The dollar rose to its highest level in more than three months on Friday, as turmoil in the markets left it as a safe haven.

Dollar-denominated metals are more expensive to holders of other currencies.

Price said that the fundamental drivers of aluminium production in the Gulf were soaring energy costs, and they had difficulty obtaining raw materials.

"Even if?didn't, they couldn't ship out. It's a nightmare. This means that about 2 to 3 millions tons of capacity are at risk. Price stated that there is no quick-fix solution. Last year, the world produced 73.8 millions tons of primary aluminum.

LME aluminium stocks The?lowest level since July was 445,300 tonnes. Spread between cash LME Aluminium contract and three-month forward Last year, the price of metal was $29 per ton lower than it is today. This indicates a demand for metal in the near future.

In China, however, Shanghai exchange aluminium ?stocks The number of tons sold increased by?5.6% compared to last week, reaching 416,425 for the first time since April 2020.

Copper also fell?1.2%, to $12,874 per ton, due to macroeconomic concerns. This is the third consecutive daily loss.

Nickel dropped 1.3% to $17.520, while tin fell 3.1%?to $48,875 and the price of lead was down by 0.9%?at $1.929.50 after reaching its lowest level since May. Zinc, the only metal to gain, rose 0.2%, or $3,308. (Reporting and editing by Sonia Cheema; Additional reporting by Dylan Duan and Amy Lv in Shanghai; Lewis Jackson and Diti Pjara in Beijing)

(source: Reuters)