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LME Aluminium nears 4Y Peak on Iran Attacks on Gulf Smelters

March 30 (Reuters) - Aluminium prices on the London Metal Exchange jumped 6% to close in on four-year ​highs on Monday after the Middle East's two ‌largest producers of the metal sustained damage from Iranian attacks over the weekend.

Benchmark LME three-month aluminium rose to $3,492 per metric ton, the ​highest since March 19, at the start of ​trading as Gulf smelters Emirates Global Aluminium and Aluminium Bahrain assess ⁠damage to their facilities from the strikes.

A break above $3,546.50 ​from March 12 would open the way to peaks last ​seen during the depth of the Covid era in 2022.

Aluminium Bahrain, which runs one of the world's largest smelters, said on Sunday it ​was assessing the damage following Iranian strikes on the facility.

Two ​employees at Aluminium Bahrain were hurt in Saturday's attack, the state-controlled company ‌said, ⁠while regional peer Emirates Global Aluminium's site sustained significant damage from missile and drone strikes the same day.

Most Gulf aluminium producers, which account for about 9% of global supply, have ​been unable ​to ship to ⁠world markets via their normal channels since the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran began due ​to Tehran's effective closure of the Strait of ​Hormuz.

EGA ⁠is the Middle East's largest producer of the metal and Alba operates the world's largest single-site smelter.

Shares in Australian-listed alumina ⁠producers ​also rallied, with Rio Tinto up ​more than 2 percent and South32 up almost 7 percent.

Reporting by Tom Daly ​and Melanie Burton; Editing by Christian Schmollinger and Jonathan Oatis

Source: Reuters


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