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Markets

Aluminium wavers as market weighs supply, macros

  • The most-traded aluminium contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange added 0.33% at 22,910 yuan ($3,373.53) a ton
Published Updated
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SINGAPORE: Aluminium fell slightly on Tuesday as the market continued to gauge supply conditions and the wider macroeconomic outlook. Benchmark three-month aluminium on the London Metal Exchange edged down 0.16% to $3,110.5 a metric ton by 0300 GMT.

It hit a one-week high earlier in the session before declining in line with most of the wider base metal complex.

The most-traded aluminium contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange added 0.33% at 22,910 yuan ($3,373.53) a ton.

This would be the fourth consecutive daily increase there.

Aluminium stablised over the last week after being battered by expectations of returning supply from the Middle East and the receding Gulf war risk premium. But some analysts warn it will take more time for supply to normalise, and physical stocks remain low.

Total stocks in LME-registered warehouses are at their lowest levels since 2022.

Elsewhere, copper prices dipped slightly, falling 0.18% on both the LME and 0.09% on the SHFE. Traders expecting news from the White House on potential tariffs on refined copper last week were left disappointed, with no announcement forthcoming.

The market was left in wait-and-see mode.

Tariff considerations have supported copper by pulling material into US warehouses.

Demand growth expectations tied to AI infrastructure, grid upgrades and electric vehicles have also supported prices for the red metal.

Data released overnight by the US futures regulator showed that speculators trimmed their bullish position on Comex in the week to June 30.

The dollar fluctuated throughout the morning, while oil edged up but remained near its pre-Middle East war price levels.

The wider base metal complex also mostly fluctuated, as market participants sought direction in a relatively calmer macroeconomic environment.

On the LME, zinc dipped 0.18%, lead dipped 0.13%, nickel dipped 0.29% and tin lost 0.64%. On the SHFE, zinc gained 0.98%, lead lost 0.47%, nickel was steady and tin dipped 0.1%.

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