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Readily available Russian-origin aluminium stocks in LME system fell 11% in December

Russian aluminium stocks in London Metal Exchange warehouses readily available to the marketplace fell 11% in December from November, LME data revealed, as traders and consumers wanted to avoid lines for Indian metal in Port Klang, Malaysia.

The aluminium stored in LME signed up storage facilities in Port Klang is primarily of Indian origin and is wanted by Western customers, much of which have refused to purchase metal produced in Russia, after it attacked Ukraine almost three years back.

Readily available aluminium stocks of Russian origin or those that are on warrant << MALSTX-TOTAL > reached 163,450 metric tons at the end-December, which totaled up to 56% of the overall, compared with 254,500 tons at the end of November, which was 67% of the overall.

The rest of Russian aluminium warrants, title files that give ownership, have been cancelled suggesting they have been earmarked to leave the LME system.

Cancelled warrants or aluminium marked for shipment at ISTIM UK's LME approved storage facilities in Port Klang stood at 239,705 loads and LME information revealed the queue to take shipment of that metal was 163 days at end-December.

The LME did not prohibit Russian metal until April in 2015. Before then many business holding Russian aluminium deposited their stocks in LME warehouses, much of it in the South Korean Port of Gwangyang.

Indian-origin aluminium at 120,225 lots at end-December consisted of 41% of on warrant stocks in the LME system up from 31%. at end-Nov.

(source: Reuters)