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Increased Russian metal stock in LME warehouses due to Indian aluminium outflow

LME data released on Monday showed that the proportion of aluminium with Russian origin registered in warehouses at the London Metal Exchange increased to 75% from 67%, and the share of Indian origin decreased to 24%.

According to traders, the majority of the aluminium in LME registered warehouses at Port Klang in Malaysia is of Indian origin. This is what Western consumers are looking for, as many have refused to purchase metal made in Russia ever since Russia invaded Ukraine three years ago.

Stocks of aluminium with Russian origin, or those on warrant At the end February, the total metric tonnage was 155,125, compared with 164,475 at the end January.

The remaining Russian aluminum warrants, which are title documents conferring ownership, have all been cancelled. This means that they will be leaving the LME.

Metal produced in Russia from April 13 to 2024 is banned by the LME. However, metals made before this date are still allowed to be traded.

Many companies that held Russian aluminum before April 13 have deposited their stock in LME warehouses.

LME data shows that the number of cancelled warrants and metals marked for delivery at ISTIM UK’s LME-approved Port Klang warehouses stood at 217 250 tons. The queue to receive this metal was 166 days long at the end of February.

The LME data revealed that the queue for loading out of ISTIM's Gwangyang warehouses was shorter at the end of February - down from 81 to 59 days.

At end-February, Indian-origin aluminum, which was 49,400 tonnes, represented 24% of the LME system's on-warrant stock, down from 75.225 tons.

About half of the LME's available stocks were copper and nickel. (Reporting and editing by Shash Kuber; Polina Devitt)

(source: Reuters)