China's primary aluminium output fell for a third straight month in October, according to official data released on Wednesday, as low aluminium prices prompted smelters to cut production even before government-mandated winter restrictions kick in.
The world's top aluminium maker produced 2.72 million tonnes of the metal last month, according to data from the National Bureau of Statistics. That was down 2.5 percent from 2.79 million tonnes in September, although up 6.8 percent from the same month a year ago.
On a daily basis, China produced around 88,000 tonnes of aluminium last month, versus 93,000 tonnes in September, according to Reuters calculations. September had one day fewer than October. That was the lowest so far this year on a daily basis, according to historical data.
China has opted not to enforce a repeat of blanket 30 percent output curbs on aluminium and alumina output in 28 northern cities this winter. The curbs were in place for the peak winter heating season from Nov. 15-March 15 in 2018/19. This winter's cuts are to be decided by individual cities but it remains unclear how much major smelters will have to cut.
Market forces are, however, leading to cutbacks already, as smelter margins are squeezed. Shanghai aluminium prices fell 2.1 percent in October, partly on expectations of more lenient curbs, and hit a two-year low of 13,790 yuan ($1,983) a tonne on Nov. 6.
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