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Andy Home: LME traders at the ROI were wrongly pricing metal supply crises.

Metals traders began the year fretting about an upcoming supply crunch for copper, but ended the first quarter with a very imminent aluminium supply crisis.

In its fifth week, the Iran war has calmed some of the frenzy of speculation that erupted in the London Metal Exchange's (LME) base metals complex in January.

It has pushed aluminium to its highest level since 2022, with two Gulf smelters being damaged by Iranian missile strikes and shipping through the Strait still severely restricted.

Even though energy prices are surging, the metals bulls still have a good grip on the market.

EXPLOSIVE ALUMINIUM

The Iran War has revealed the fragility in the Western Aluminium Supply Chain. Around 9% of the world's smelting capability and 18% global exports are accounted for by the Gulf.

Initial impact was the logistical squeeze that resulted from the closure of the Strait of Hormuz. The Qatari smelter Qatalum, as well as Aluminium Bahrain (Alba), both reduced their operating rates in order to conserve?raw materials stocks.

Next came direct attacks. Alba, which was hit by Iranian missiles, has now been reduced to 30% of its capacity. The giant Al Taweelah, operated by Emirates Global Aluminium is also completely out of action due to damage to the power plant.

The supply chain is being shook by a crisis no one could have predicted.

Western aluminium buyers face a 'double blow' from the simultaneous increase in the LME aluminum price and the sharp jump in physical prices. The LME copper price hit a nominal record of $14,527.50 a metric ton last January, as investors bought in to the enticing "bull narrative" of stellar demand growth. However, there is no shortage of the metal in the present. Global exchange stocks ended March at just under 1.4 million metric tonnes, which is a multi-year record. LME's three-month copper ended the quarter at $12335.50 per tonne, 15% lower than the peak of January and essentially flat compared to the beginning of the year. In January, tin reached a record-high price of $59 040 per ton as investors chased a similar meme of scarcity. Industrial players also responded to the scarcity of tin by delivering it into LME's warehouses. Since the beginning of the year, registered tin stock has increased by 60%. Another 2,951 tonnes are in the LME’s non-warranty stocks.

As with copper, the LME spread structure for tin shows no signs of tightness. Both metals are in wide contango and there is no shortage of units.

Nickel and lead markets are not in danger of a shortage. Both LME stocks are very high, and the time-spreads have been relaxed.

LME lead stock has risen to over 500,000 tonnes and is set to replace aluminium as the metal of choice for financing.

Zinc is still an "outlier", the galvanising material stubbornly refusing to perform as script.

LME inventories have not been rebuilt in a meaningful way. Stocks are only up 7,900 tonnes on the start the year. It is currently trading at a marginal contagious of $5.00 per tonne.

SECOND-ROUND ?IMPACT

As we enter the second half of the year, the biggest question hanging over LME base metals is the impact that the Iran War will have on demand.

The escalating energy costs are bad news for both manufacturers and consumers.

It is important to consider how long the hostilities will last. This is why metals went from being in the spotlight in January, to following them slavishly in March.

The war in the Gulf has been going on for too long, and it will be felt for months.

Andy Home is a columnist at. This column is great! Check out Open Interest, your new essential source for global financial commentary. Follow ROI on LinkedIn and X. Listen to the Morning Bid podcast daily on Apple, Spotify or the app. Subscribe to the Morning Bid podcast and hear journalists discussing the latest news in finance and markets seven days a weeks.

(source: Reuters)