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Aluminum gains continue as concerns about supply amid Mideast conflict persist

Aluminum gains continue as concerns about supply amid Mideast conflict persist
Aluminum gains continue as concerns about supply amid Mideast conflict persist

Aluminum prices continued to rise on Thursday. They were boosted by lingering fears about a tightening of global supply amid the Middle East conflict which shows no signs of abating.

As of 0212 GMT, the most traded aluminium contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange rose 1.25% to $25460 yuan per metric ton. The benchmark three-month aluminum on the London Metal Exchange rose 1.48% to $3504 per ton. This is closer to the nearly four-year-high of $3,544 that was reached earlier this week. Prices have risen as a result of supply concerns caused by the war in the Middle East. The Middle East is responsible for about 9% of the global supply of aluminium. Iran and the United States have both signaled that their war will not be over soon. Iran has warned the world to prepare for oil priced at $200 per barrel, after hitting tankers near the Strait of Hormuz and in Iraqi waters.

ING analysts stated in a note that the situation is unstable and aluminium remains highly sensitive to geopolitical headlines, keeping volatility high. Commodity traders Mercuria have cancelled or earmarked delivery of nearly 100,000 tons aluminium at LME-approved storage facilities in Port 'Klang, Malaysia Monday is a holiday.

The analysts at Benchmark Mineral Intelligence have raised their forecast for 2026 aluminium prices to $3,100 per ton from $2,900, as recent developments?increase the likelihood of an even more acute supply crunch.

Other SHFE metals saw a 0.41% decline in copper, while nickel grew by 0.68%. Lead was flat. Tin fell 1.04%. Zinc rose 0.06%.

Copper slipped 0.06% among?other LME Metals. Nickel fell 0.36%. Lead added 0.21%. Tin gained 0.39%. Zinc climbed 0.6%.

(source: Reuters)