LONDON: Aluminium eased on Tuesday on a stronger dollar, but prices remained close to 10-year highs as supply concerns sparked by a coup in Guinea added to production disruptions elsewhere.
The metal, used in automobiles and beverage cans, has been beset with supply disruptions across the world, raising concerns over availability.
"Aluminium has been boosted by the repeating news about supply issues, whether in China, Jamaica, Canada and now in Guinea," said Commerzbank analyst Daniel Briesemann said, adding this would support prices in the short term.
Although no major mines have been disrupted, a coup in Guinea at the weekend sparked supply concerns as the West African nation is the biggest source of aluminium ore bauxite for top producer China.
Benchmark three-month aluminium on the London Metal Exchange shed 0.5% to $2,760 a tonne in official trading. In the previous session it touched its highest since May 2011 at $2,782.
Aluminium rises to 10-year high as supply fears grow
"We believe that prices are way too high and expect a correction in the remainder of the year," Briesemann said.
On Tuesday, the dollar firmed against a basket of other currencies, making assets such as aluminium and copper priced in the US greenback less attractive to global buyers.
China Trade: Chinese exports of unwrought aluminium and products were 490,286 tonnes in August, hitting their highest since March 2020 with a 24% year-on-year jump and up 4.5% from July, data from customs showed.
Copper Imports: Copper prices were sapped by data showing that imports into top consumer China declined 41% year-on-year in August to their lowest since June 2019 at 394,017 tonnes.
"We believe the decrease is due in part to the high basis for comparison, as China had imported record-high quantities of copper opportunistically in the summer months last year - presumably in excess of its needs," Commerbank analysts said.
High prices, too, were deterring buyers, they said.
Other Prices: Copper fell 1.2% to $9,340 a tonne, zinc rose 0.8% to $3,031, lead was flat at $2,274.50, tin shed 1% to $32,575, while nickel declined 0.5% to $19,550.