RPT-COLUMN-New aluminium crisis looms as output rises in demand void: Andy Home

In This Article:

(Repeats April 22 column with no changes. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters)

* Global Output by Region in Q1 2020: https://reut.rs/34Xvb61

* LME price, stocks and spreads: https://reut.rs/3avhQDa

By Andy Home

LONDON, April 22 (Reuters) - Global aluminium production rose by 2.1% over the first three months of this year, according to the latest figures from the International Aluminium Institute.

This is a disaster for the world's aluminium producers. Amid all the uncertainty generated by COVID-19, one thing is for sure. Aluminium usage hasn't risen by anything close to that rate. It's rather a question of how hard it has fallen.

Given the lockdown of much of the world's auto manufacturing capacity, a key end-use sector for aluminium, the intuitive answer is very hard indeed.

In the opaque aluminium market the truest signal is price and that on the London Metal Exchange hit a four-year low of $1,455 per tonne earlier this month. It is currently trading around $1,490.

At least aluminium isn't going to "go negative" like the WTI oil contract. Storage space isn't going to run out. But that's part of aluminium's problem.

MINIMAL LOCKDOWN IMPACT

Other industrial metals are experiencing a supply shock which is partly mitigating the coronavirus demand shock as mines around the world are forced to stop operations due to lockdowns in key producer countries such as Peru.

However, for the most part aluminium smelters even in countries with the most severe lockdowns such as South Africa have been designated critical industries and allowed to continue operating.

The biggest lockdown hit has been experienced by Argentina's Aluar, which has temporarily shuttered 50% of its 460,000-tonne per year Puerto Madryn plant to comply with the government's emergency quarantine measures.

Elsewhere, Rio Tinto has idled one of four potlines at its Tiwai Point smelter in New Zealand and Hydro has pushed back the restart of a 95,000-tonne line at its Husnes plant in Norway. Ironically, the line is being revived after being mothballed during the last aluminium price crisis in 2009.

The Tiwai Point plant was already under long-term review due to low prices. So too is Rio's ISAL smelter in Iceland, which is running at 85% of its 230,000-tonne per year capacity under what the company calls its "value over volume" policy.

That underlines the slow price response time of the global aluminium industry. Most producers are still reacting to last year's low prices rather than the current demand shock.