
Aluminium resumes ascent, eyes best week in 18 months as Mideast war intensifies

Aluminium prices rose again on Friday after snapping a three-day winning streak in the previous session, and were heading for their biggest weekly jump in more than 18 months as supply concerns due to the U.S.-Israel war on Iran intensified.
Benchmark three-month aluminium on the London Metal Exchange was up 1.9% at $3,360 per metric ton in official open outcry activity, close to a near four-year peak of $3,418 struck on Wednesday as the Mideast crisis threatened to cut off aluminium shipments from the region via the Strait of Hormuz.
LME aluminium was on course to gain 7.3% this week, which would mark its biggest weekly jump since August 2024. Qatari smelter Qatalum and Aluminium Bahrain have already declared force majeure on shipments.
"Given the Middle East accounts for around 9% of global production and supply is at risk, we have raised our shortfall forecast to 1.5 million tons from 1 million tons" for 2026, Bank of America said in a note.
Israel pounded Lebanese capital Beirut on Friday in a major expansion of the war against Iran.
LME aluminium inventories


