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Aluminum prices rise on fears of supply as the Iran conflict escalates

Aluminum prices continued to rise on Wednesday, as supply concerns grew after Norsk Hydro of Norway announced a controlled shut-down?in their aluminium joint venture in Qatar in the face of a growing war in the Middle East.

Around 8% of global aluminum capacity is accounted for by the region. As the conflict spreads into neighbouring countries and Iran threatens to target ships trying to transit the Strait, supply concerns are becoming more real.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange's most active aluminium contract closed the daytime trade 2.31% higher, at 24,795 Yuan ($3,585.11) per metric ton.

As of 0700 GMT, the benchmark?aluminum for three months on the London Metal Exchange increased by 1.60% to $2,303 per ton.

Norsk Hydro announced the Qatalum shut down on Tuesday, after its gas provider warned of an imminent supply halt. The?company announced that it has issued a notice of force majeure to its customers, as the curtailment is continuing.

In a recent note, commodities strategist Ewa Manthey at ING said that the disruption had "hit a market?that?was already tight".

"Prior the conflict, we had a 600kt deficit in our aluminium balance for 2026." China's cap on capacity, trade disruptions, and the impending shutdown of Mozal all contributed to the supply constraint, Manthey stated. He also added that the LME inventory drop, premium increases, and tightening between the LME Cash Contract and benchmark three-month contract were other factors. Even before the war, there was a shortage of supplies.

Aluminium's gains were capped by a stronger dollar.

The most active copper contract in Shanghai fell 0.73% to 101,660 yuan per ton. Meanwhile, the benchmark copper rose 0.58% to $13,030 per ton.

Citi analysts warned that continued disruptions would continue to put pressure on macroeconomics and reduce demand for metals.

The Federal Reserve also said that softer growth forecasts and declining expectations of interest rate cuts have contributed to the downward pressure on prices.

On the SHFE, tin fell?5.17%, and nickel edged up 0.12%.

$1 = 6.9161 Chinese yuan renminbi $1 = 6.9161 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Lewis Jackson, Dylan Duan and Sonia Cheema).

(source: Reuters)