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Sources say that Mercuria sold aluminium below the Fastmarkets assessment in Europe

Three sources with knowledge of the matter said that Mercuria sold aluminum in Europe at a price below what was assessed by the price reporting agency Fastmarkets. This suggests the global benchmark may not always reflect the prices buyers are willing to pay. The price of European aluminium has risen following the Iran War, which disrupted Middle East supplies. Fastmarkets is used widely by both producers and consumers for large-volume trades of aluminium, which is used in construction, packaging, and transport. A source said that Mercuria had failed to get bids when it attempted to sell aluminium earlier this month at the Fastmarkets premium. The Swiss trader sold aluminium later at a discount between $10 and $15 per metric ton compared to the assessed price.

FAST-MOVING?MARKET Buyers on the physical market pay the London Metal Exchange plus the European duty paid premium assessed by Fastmarkets. This premium reflects?transport, tax, and handling costs. Fastmarkets data indicates that the premium reached a four-year peak at $587.50 per metric ton early in April. This is up 56% from the end of February after U.S., Israeli and Iranian airstrikes against Iran and Tehran’s response.

Mercuria declined comment.

Fastmarkets stated that it was not uncommon for individual transactions to occur above or below the assessed level in fast-moving markets.

"A single transaction, or a bilateral deal influenced by factors like?timing or volume, brand or logistics, counterparty relations or balance sheet considerations does not invalidate a benchmark constructed using multiple data points or perspectives." Sources in the industry said that market backwardation, or higher prices for nearer delivery dates than later ones, was encouraging traders and producers to sell aluminium as storage costs and financing costs were eroding margins. The LME cash contract spread and the three-month forward are closely monitored. The price of aluminium, which reached a 15-year high near $80 per ton in the first half of this month. The fear of severe shortages resulting from Middle Eastern supply disruptions has pushed up physical?premiums. About?7million tons of aluminum smelting is produced in the Middle East, which accounts for?roughly 10% of global supply.

Trade Data Monitor reports that Europe imported 1.2 million tonnes of primary and alloyed aluminum from Egypt and the Middle East last year. This represents 20% of Europe's total imports. Reporting by Pratima Dasai. (Editing by Veronica Brown, Mark Potter and Mark Potter.

(source: Reuters)