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Sources say that commodities trader IXM is considering restarting aluminium trading.

Sources say that commodities trader IXM is considering restarting aluminium trading.
Sources say that commodities trader IXM is considering restarting aluminium trading.

Two sources familiar with the matter said that commodities trader IXM has held preliminary 'talks' with major aluminium suppliers and is looking to restart its aluminium trading business in 2019.

One source said that Geneva-based IXM owned by China's CMOC Group, and one of world's biggest traders of non-ferrous physical metals has been discussing internally the rebuilding of a?team to trade aluminium since December. The source said that no team had been formed so far.

IXM met with Chinese metals producer Lygend Resources, a second source confirmed.

A CMOC spokesperson stated that "as a 'trading company', IXM would adjust the specific trading products?according to the market conditions."

IXM and Lygend didn't immediately respond to comments.

This move coincides, in part, with forecasts that there will be a shortage of light metals used for transport and construction as well as packaging due to the demand being driven by electrification and carbonisation.

The benchmark three-month aluminum on the London Metal Exchange is up 38% since 2025. It reached a four-year high of $3,544 a metric ton earlier this week.

The U.S. and Israel war against Iran could worsen this?deficit, as it has frozen shipments originating from the Gulf region, which is responsible for 9% of the global supply.

IXM lists cobalt, lead, zinc and?nickel in its trading portfolio, but not aluminium. One source said that the trading house closed its aluminium business in 2024. Reporting by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson and Dylan Duan from Beijing and Shanghai; editing by Kevin Buckland

(source: Reuters)