Sign in | Join us  
      
 Popular Searches:diamond,cbn,tuck point blade,cup wheel,saw blade, brown fused alumina
Home -- Information


  Featured Companies
 • Yantai Cct Metal…
 • Dymend Tools Co.,…
 • Henan Boreas New…
 • Yancheng Xiehe Machinery…
 • EKF Industrial Supplies…
 • Ruishi New Material…
 • MORESUPERHARD
 • Henan Banner New…
 • Zhengzhou best synthetic…
 • Zhengzhou Haixu…

 Print  Add to Favorite
Custom your font size:     

Aluminum glut to continue as smelters get lifeline of lower costs


Post Date: 24 Jun 2015    Viewed: 388

The aluminum market is unlikely to see enough producer cutbacks to reduce oversupply in coming months as currency benefits and cheaper inputs have allowed most smelters to stay out of the red.

That means the price of the lightweight metal used in transport and packaging may be drawn still lower toward levels that would force more supply to be shut down, analysts and industry sources said.

Closures or lower output are needed to slash a surplus on global markets mainly due to surging output and exports from top producer China. Consultancy CRU has increased its forecast of a global aluminum surplus for 2015 to 963,000 tonnes.

"Cutbacks are going to be difficult. Input costs have come down, so margins at producers may in fact have stayed OK even though prices have come down," said Robin Bhar, head of metals research at Societe Generale in London.

The so-called "all-in" aluminum price - the cash aluminum price on the London Metal Exchange plus the surcharge or premium for immediate delivery - has tumbled 28 percent over the past seven months to about $1,830 a ton.

But costs have also slid, partly due to weaker local currencies against the dollar in top aluminum producers such as Russia, Norway and Canada, keeping many operations profitable.

With the price of raw material alumina also down, overall costs to make aluminum have sunk by about $400, bringing down marginal costs to about $1,600 a ton, Bhar said.

Marginal costs - the 90th percentile of the cost curve - are regarded as the level that prompt curtailments to production when prices drop below them.

SURGING CHINA OUTPUT

Production has continued to surge in China, partly due to lower costs for alumina and power, climbing 22 percent year-on-year in May to a record high of 2.67 million tonnes.

"China is still building out lots of new smelting capacity, which is another factor in reducing the Chinese cost floor. All of the smelters they're building are state of the art, highly energy efficient," said analyst David Wilson at Citi in London.

Outside of China, Russia's Rusal and U.S. Alcoa have said in recent months they were considering further shutdowns.

Top producer Rusal said in April it might idle 200,000 tonnes of capacity while Alcoa said the month before it was reviewing 500,000 tonnes of smelting capacity.

Decisions on whether to trim output, however, would not be easy after millions of tonnes have already been shut in recent years.

"Cutbacks are much more difficult now. Most of the obvious candidates have already been shut down by the big producers," said Marco Georgiou at CRU. "If we have to go into a new round of cutbacks, it will be more painful this time." 


Superhard Material of China

Superhard Material of China

Abrasives and Grinding Products of China

Abrasives and Grinding Products of China

Coated Abrasives of China

Coated Abrasives of China

Chia International Abrasives & Grinding Exposition

China International Abrasives & Grinding Exposition

Home | About Us | Members | Contact | Advertising Quotation
Supported by Yuanfa Information Technology co.,Ltd
Copyright ©Abrasivesunion 2006. All rights reserved
Page rendered in 0.0237 seconds
增值电信业务经营许可证:豫B2-20202116  ICP备案:豫B2-20100036-2