Lower Fee for Japanese buyers of Aluminum

Aluminum producers lowered the fee for Japanese buyers after China resumed halted capacity and supply in Asia rose as smelters began production. Premiums for the three months ending June 30 fell to $122 per metric ton down from $125 to $130 this quarter (the highest level in 14 years). The premium for Good Western-grade aluminum ingot more than doubled in 2009 as record purchases by China and decreased supplies from Russia caused shortage of the metal in Asia.

China, the largest buyer of copper in the world, decreased import after record purchases in 2009 as local smelters restarted production. Aluminum smelters in China, the largest producer of the industrial metal, resumed 5 million tons per annum of idled capacity in past year as profit margins improved with increasing prices. China’s purchases of refined aluminum dropped to 40,059 metric tons in January from 42,106 tons in December as the nation have ample inventories after it have bought more metal than necessary on outlook for a demand recovery.

Delivery for aluminum in three months rose 0.3 percent to $2,225 per ton by 15:57 on the London Metal Exchange. The price has reached previously a 15-month high.

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