Business Day

Markets brace for aluminium inventory glut

- Mark Burton

When aluminium demand last contracted during the financial crisis and the metal started clogging warehouses, it took more than a decade to work through the glut.

Now, the market is bracing for another sharp increase in inventorie­s as demand growth grinds to a halt.

Aluminium has tumbled to a two-and-a-half-year low as slowing global growth and the US-China trade war hurt demand for the metal.

While stockpiles tracked by the London Metal Exchange (LME) fell to their lowest since 2007 last week, traders say inventorie­s are building in the physical market as weaker order books leave consumers with more metal than they need.

That leaves traders preparing for a potential rebound in exchange stockpiles as the weakest demand growth since 2009 and tightening spreads encourage deliveries into warehouses. As was the case in the financial crisis, the supply imbalance could be exacerbate­d by producers loath to curb output in the short term, due to the heavy costs involved in bringing mothballed production lines back into service.

“In terms of all the economic indicators we’re looking at, everything is pointing to a further downturn,” Kamil Wlazly, an analyst at Wood Mackenzie, said on the sidelines of the Fastmarket­s Internatio­nal Aluminum conference in Athens.

“Next year could potentiall­y be even worse because we don’t think the market has bottomed out yet.”

The slowdown in key sectors such as the European car industry is putting the aluminium industry on course for annual demand growth of 1%-2% this year, according to Wood Mackenzie. Rival consultanc­y CRU Group expects an even worse year, with demand rising just 0.2% globally and contractin­g 1.2% outside of China.

Macro uncertaint­ies are also hurting the outlook for producers. Goldman Sachs Group last week downgraded Alcoa, the biggest American aluminium producer, to neutral from buy.

To be sure, demand is still holding up far better than it did during the crisis, but traders are cautioning that there could be swift knock-on effects in the physical market as the industry’s previously impressive growth rates go into reverse. LME aluminium traded at $1,727.50 a ton around midday in London on Monday. Trading house Concord Resources says prices may need to fall a further 10% or more before meaningful supply cuts are made.

With LME inventorie­s near their lowest since 2007, market participan­ts see the conditions for another surge in stockpiles, though to a less dramatic extent than seen in the financial crisis.

While it is typically cheaper to store metal away from the exchange, traders on the sidelines of the Athens conference said the issue may come to a head towards the end of 2019, as a spike in the spread between futures for December and January delivery is making it onerous for stockholde­rs to keep hold of their positions.

December aluminium traded at a $10.50 premium to January contracts on Thursday, in a condition known as backwardat­ion that often draws inventorie­s into exchange warehouses as stockholde­rs seek to cash in on the higher nearby prices.

Persistent backwardat­ions are widely viewed as a sign the market is running short of metal, but participan­ts say this one could prove short-lived given that many traders, producers and consumers have excess stock on hand.

Aluminium traders polled by Bloomberg said it would not be surprising to see 200,000 tons or more arriving on the bourse by year-end, with top-end estimates seen at about 500,000 tons, if the backwardat­ion creates a strong enough incentive for stockholde­rs to deliver.

In such an event, the spread could unravel into a condition known as contango, where shorter-term contracts trade below those with later maturities. The rest of the forward curve has been moving into a widening contango as demand deteriorat­ed over recent months, and the December-January spread could follow suit if metal does arrive on the bourse.

“I think the December-January backwardat­ion will be a blip,” Wlazly said. He said consistent­ly wide contangos seen over for the past few months suggests there is enough stock to deliver to overcome these periods of tightness.

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