ADVERTISEMENT

Metals Gripped by Turmoil as Rusal's Sanctions Fallout Spreads

U.S. sanctions against Rusal are setting off explosions across global metals markets.

Metals Gripped by Turmoil as Rusal's Sanctions Fallout Spreads
Steam rises from olten aluminum as it cools inside ingot molds at the Alumetal Group Hungary Kft. aluminium processing plant in Komarom, Hungary. (Photographer: Akos Stiller/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The U.S. sanctions against United Co. Rusal are setting off explosions across global metals markets.

Consumers, manufacturers and traders are scrambling to secure supply cut off by Rusal, the largest aluminum producer outside China. Aluminum reached a six-year high and nickel jumped the most intraday since 2009. Alumina, a raw material needed to make aluminum, notched a fresh record.

“It really is unprecedented in terms of the turmoil it’s unleashed,” Robin Bhar, a metals analyst at Societe Generale SA, said by phone from London. “It’s amazing to watch.”

The U.S. sanctions are threatening to upend the global supply chain for aluminum, which is used in planes made by Boeing Co. and Ford Motor Co.’s F-150 pickup truck. Rusal produces about 6 percent of the world’s aluminum and operates mines, smelters and refineries across the world from Guinea to Ireland, Russia to Jamaica.

An index of 32 mining and metals companies is heading for a fourth weekly gain. The Bloomberg Americas Mining index rose 2.3 percent Wednesday, with First Quantum Minerals Ltd. and Freeport-McMoRan Inc. among the biggest gainers, and Alcoa Corp. reaching the highest since 2008.

Aluminum

The metal climbed 5.5 percent to settle at $2,537 a metric ton at 5:51 p.m. in London. It earlier advanced as much as 6.4 percent to $2,559, the highest since August 2011. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said prices could spike to $3,000 in the near term.

Rio Tinto Group flagged it may need to cut production in the wake of sanctions. The company is working with customers to minimize disruption and remains in the process of declaring force majeure on some contracts, it said Wednesday.

Metals Gripped by Turmoil as Rusal's Sanctions Fallout Spreads

Alumina

Alumina is being particularly affected because Rusal is a key producer, with plants in places such as Ireland and Jamaica. Before the sanctions, supply was already constrained by output cuts at Norsk Hydro ASA’s Alunorte refinery in Brazil, the world’s biggest.

A 30,000-ton cargo of alumina, the crushed ore feedstock which smelters use to produce aluminum, fetched $800 a ton, according to CRU Group analyst Anthony Everiss. The previous record for CRU’s index of alumina prices was $610 a ton in 2006.

Metals Gripped by Turmoil as Rusal's Sanctions Fallout Spreads

Nickel

Nickel surged as traders speculated that other Russian companies could be targeted by U.S. sanctions. Bullish sentiment was also boosted after production slumped 18 percent at Vale SA and BHP Billiton Ltd. forecast higher demand for electric vehicles.

The metal jumped 7.5 percent to settle at $15,275 a ton in London. It earlier climbed as much as 12 percent to $15,875, the highest since December 2014.

Metals Gripped by Turmoil as Rusal's Sanctions Fallout Spreads

--With assistance from Susanne Barton and Joe Richter

To contact the reporter on this story: Mark Burton in London at mburton51@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lynn Thomasson at lthomasson@bloomberg.net, James Attwood at jattwood3@bloomberg.net, Steven Frank

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.