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Aluminium under pressure as Middle East risk premium declines

The market was expecting a better supply of aluminium from the Middle East as a U.S. Iran interim peace agreement appeared to be holding.

In official open-outcry trade, the benchmark three-month 'aluminium' on the London Metal Exchange was?down by 0.2% to $3,086 per metric ton.

Citi analysts said that "weaker demand, eased geopolitical risk and increasing expectations of future supplies have led to a sharp price correction over the last month." Citi expects aluminium prices to recover towards $3,300 per ton between September and December before hitting a bottom within a week.

Metal touched $3,040 on Thursday, its lowest since February 19. However, it managed to remain above a psychologically important level of $3,000 due to a weaker U.S. dollar, which eased concerns about an impending interest rate increase in the U.S. following disappointing U.S. job data. In an effort to ease concerns over future production in the Middle East - which produces 9% of world supply -?Emirates Global Aluminium announced on Thursday that it would be restoring production earlier than expected at one its complexes damaged by Iranian missile attacks in March. Two sources said that Japanese aluminium buyers have agreed to pay global producers a premium of $395 per tonne over the benchmark price for July-September shipments. This is an increase of 12-13% compared to the previous quarter. The higher premiums in Japan indicate that there is still some tightness on the global physical market, but analysts expect this to loosen up in July-August and resume in September.

Copper, another LME metal, rose by a mere 0.1% to $13,342 per ton, in official activity. This was supported by the weaker dollar, and continued outflows of LME stocks. Shanghai Futures Exchange .

China's Yangshan Copper Premium The price of, which represents the buying appetite in the largest consumer market, reached $74 per ton this week, its highest level since mid-April.

LME tin?jumped 2.1%, to $52,005. Stocks of tin in SHFE-monitored warehouses jumped 2.1% to $52,005. This week, the number of tons fell 18% to a record low of 6,222 tonnes.

Lead climbed 0.7%, zinc gained 1.3%, nickel increased 0.4%, to reach $16,320. (Reporting and editing by Harikrishnan Nair; Additional reporting by Solomon Cefai)

(source: Reuters)