Your Location > Home > News & Market >Domestic News > Aluminium prices not curbing Chinese output
Today' Focus
-
Hangzhou Jinjiang Group's general manager Zhang Jianyang, vice general manager Sun Jiabin and their team had attended the SECOND BELT AND ROAD FORUM FOR INTERNATIONAL COOPERATION, they also attended the signing ceremony of comprehensive strateg...
International News
Domestic News
Domestic News
Aluminium prices not curbing Chinese output
- China Aluminium Network
- Post Time: 2015/8/6
- Click Amount: 580
Chinese aluminum producers aren't curbing their output despite the metal's slump to a six-year low, suggesting the price of one of the world's most heavily-traded metals still has far to go before finding a floor.
Metals producers normally usher in supply cutbacks when prices fall as hard as they have done for aluminium this year. But with a host of new cost-efficient smelters now online in China, few there are considering cutbacks.
That is bad news for the broader market as surging Chinese aluminum exports in recent months have been one of the biggest drivers of the metal's price plunge. China accounts for about half of the world's aluminium production.
Three-month aluminum futures are hovering near a six-year low of $US1601.50 per ton reached on Monday this week, down by nearly 13 per cent since the beginning of the year.
More than half of China's aluminium production capacity now has smelting costs below $US1,800 per ton, adding that falling costs are likely to be a consistent feature of the Chinese aluminium sector. Chinese smelters that produce around 1.5 million tons of aluminium a year have closed down this year, but that has been more than offset by the newer ones coming on stream. In all, Chinese aluminum production is up by 32 per cent year to date to 15.2 million tons, observed an industry analyst.
Rising international supplies of aluminum are reducing the premiums that producers can charge for immediate delivery to consumers of the metal, which range from metal fabricators such as Novelis Inc. to canned-drink producers such as Coca-Cola Co. and automobile makers such as Ford Motor Co.
Analysts say production cutbacks are more likely to come from US-based producers. A flood of Chinese aluminum there has put the local industry under pressure, forcing them to look for niche segments such as high-grade aluminum for automobiles and away from other products such as building sheets used in the construction industry.
- Copyright and Exemption Declaration :①All articles, pictures and videos that are marked with "China Aluminum Network" on this website are copyright and belong to China
Aluminium Network (www.alu.com.cn). When transshipment, any media, website or individual must list the source from "China
Aluminium Network (www.alu.com.cn)". We seek legal actions against anyone that disobey this.
②Articles that marked as copy from others are for transferring more information to readers, do not represent or endorse their opinions or
accuracy and reliability. When other media, website or individuals copy from our website, must keep the source. Anyone that changes the
articles' sources will hold the responsibilities for copyright and law problems. We also seek legal actions against anyone that disobey
this.
③If any articles copied by our website concern the copyright and other problems, please contact us within one week.