LONDON, Dec 23 (Reuters) - Aluminium rose to a two-month high on Thursday, up more than 6% since Monday's close as surging energy prices raise concerns of higher production costs and smelter shutdowns.
Prices also drew support from revived risk appetite across markets as investors hope the Omicron coronavirus variant will have less economic impact than feared. read more
Benchmark aluminium on the London Metal Exchange (LME) was up 0.6% at $2,840 a tonne at 1707 GMT, having reached $2,849 on Wednesday, the highest since Oct. 26.
Prices are up more than 40% this year -- aluminium's biggest annual gain since 2009.
"The market is pricing in the risk premium stemming from the European power market, where we have already seen some aluminium supply losses," ING analyst Wenyu Yao said.
European power prices hit record highs this week. read more
Bloomberg reported on Wednesday that Europe's largest aluminium smelter, in Dunkerque, France, had halted 3% of its production capacity.
Making aluminium requires huge amounts of electricity. Smelters typically have long-term power supply contracts. But for any buying at current prices, it makes "no sense to continue producing," Yao said.
OUTLOOK: Aluminium is likely to outperform other industrial metals next year, analysts said. read more
INVENTORIES: On-warrant aluminium stocks in LME-registered warehouses have fallen from 861,600 tonnes on Dec. 14 to 731,500 tonnes, suggesting tight supply. ,
INDONESIA: A unit of Indonesian coal company PT Adaro Energy (ADRO.JK) said it plans to build a $728 million aluminium smelter on Borneo island. read more
OMICRON: Two vaccine makers said their shots protect against Omicron and UK data suggested it may cause proportionally fewer hospitalisations than the Delta variant. read more
LAS BAMBAS: Peruvian protesters will clear the route to the Las Bambas copper mine until at least Dec. 30, but it is uncertain whether operations will restart. read more
COPPER: LME copper was up 0.2% at $9,628 a tonne and up around 24% this year. Higher supplies and softer demand are expected to cool prices in 2022. read more
OTHER METALS: Zinc was down 0.2% at $3,525.50 a tonne, nickel rose 0.4% to $20,030, lead fell 2.1% to $2,270 and tin was up 0.5% at $38,900.
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Oil prices steadied on Friday, but fell for the week on a stronger U.S. dollar and fears that an economic slowdown would weaken crude demand.
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