Executive Summary
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Aluminum prices fell to a 31 month low in August but failed to break below key $1,745-$1,770 per mton support zone.
LME aluminum prices fell as world manufacturing contraction deepened while the US dollar rallied to two-year highs. However, aluminum prices were unable to break below the key $1,745-$1,770 per mton threshold.
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We continue to expect prices to bottom out this quarter.
Indeed, several of our demand leading indicators suggest that conditions are set to improve in the following quarters.
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However, in the very short term, prices are still at risk of a new leg down.
The third quarter is not over, and LME aluminum prices have not confirmed a bottoming-out pattern yet. In the very short term, prices are still vulnerable to a selling wave that could break below key support at $1,745-1,770 per mton and temporarily push prices down to the next target zone of $1,680 per mton.
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We expect a subsequent weak rally amid poor fundamentals.
We expect prices to experience a limited rally in Q4 2019 and early 2020, toward the $1,900-2,000 per mton zone, but see any further upside capped by: a) a fragile world economic outlook and weak demand growth rates, b) prolonged downward pressure on smelting costs, and c) the biggest primary aluminum market surplus in a decade.
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Current LME forward prices for 2020 stand below HARBOR’s and Consensus’ base forecasts and are very close to the most bearish forecasts.