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Aluminium nears two-week low in Ukraine talks

Aluminium nears two-week low in Ukraine talks

On Tuesday, aluminium prices fell to their lowest level in almost two weeks as a result of the possibility that the Ukraine conflict would end and allow Russia, a major producer to increase supply.

The benchmark three-month aluminum on the London Metal Exchange dropped 1% at 1610 GMT to $2,562 per metric ton, its lowest level since August 6.

The price of aluminium has fallen for three sessions, including on Friday when U.S. president Donald Trump met with his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin to try to broker a peace in Ukraine.

Both Trump and Zelenskiy raised the possibility of a three-way meeting with Putin when they met on Monday.

The so-called peace bonus could include the fact that aluminum is driving the index down this week. Ole Hansen is the head of commodity strategy for Saxo Bank, Copenhagen. He said that negative price action was due to increased supply.

Many companies have refused to use Russian materials. The LME has prohibited metal produced in Russia from its warehouses after mid-April of 2024 to comply with U.S., British and European sanctions imposed on Moscow for the 2022 invasion.

"Aluminium is on an upward trend since April and today it appears that we are just below this." Hansen continued, "I would also imagine that we are seeing some technical sales below $2,580."

LME Aluminium has recovered 12% from its eight-month low in April of $2,300.

The metals complex has been weighed down by a slightly stronger dollar index, as investors await policy signals from the annual Federal Reserve Symposium in Jackson Hole this week.

The dollar is stronger, and therefore the price of commodities in U.S. dollars will be higher for foreign buyers.

Other metals include LME copper, which fell by 0.4%, to $9,693.50 per ton. Nickel also declined, falling 0.8%, to $15,030, and zinc, which dropped 0.3%, to $2,768.50. Lead rose 0.1%, to $1,973.50, and tin increased 0.4%, to $33,825.

Click here to see the latest metals news (Reporting and editing by Eric Onstad, Janane Venkatraman, Joe Bavier).

(source: Reuters)