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$3,306 LME 3-Month +0.3% today |
+5.3% Weekly Gain Highest since 2021 |
~8% ME Share Global output at risk |
$3,418 Week High Intraday peak Wed |
$3,250 3M Target Raised by analysts |
$3,000 12M Target Raised by analysts |
600kt 2026 Deficit ING pre-conflict est. |
Force Maj Alba + Qatalum Shipments halted |
A Market That Was Already Short
’s supply disruption moved from risk to operational reality this week. But the conflict did not arrive into a balanced market. ING’s pre-conflict aluminum balance for 2026 showed a structural deficit of approximately 600,000 metric tons before any Gulf supply reduction. Three constraints were already in place: China’s capacity cap limiting production expansion, the imminent closure of the Mozal smelter in Mozambique, and stalled restarts at European and U.S. smelters idled during the 2022 to 2023 energy crisis. LME aluminum inventories had been drawing steadily since late 2024, and physical premiums were elevated heading into the year.
The cash-to-three-month spread on the LME had narrowed materially in the weeks before the conflict, signalling that spot demand was absorbing available supply faster than forward markets expected. The conflict did not create aluminum’s tightness. It struck a market that was already running short, and it did so with direct operational consequences rather than just price fear.
From Threat to Halt: What Actually Stopped
Two actual production and shipping halts this week moved aluminum from a geopolitical risk story to a supply disruption story. On Tuesday, Qatalum, the Qatari smelter jointly owned by the state aluminum producer and Norsk Hydro, began a controlled shutdown after its gas supplier warned of an imminent supply halt due to conflict-related infrastructure pressure. Norsk Hydro issued force majeure notices to customers the same day. On Wednesday, Aluminium Bahrain, one of the world’s largest single-site smelters, informed customers it had halted all shipments, citing the widening conflict. The LME three-month contract rose 5.1% on the day the Alba halt was announced, touching an intraday high of $3,418 a ton, the highest since April 2022.
The week’s total gain of 5.3% to $3,306.50 reflects the cumulative repricing of a market absorbing two concrete shutdowns and the broader operational uncertainty across the region. Rio Tinto separately suspended second-quarter supply negotiations with Japanese clients, withdrawing an offer of $250 a ton over LME prices that was already the highest since at least 2015. Force majeure declarations, which were hypothetical scenarios ten days ago, are now the week’s defining market events. Supply suspensions across the region’s producer base have moved from risk assessment to operational reality.
Goldman Sachs estimated prices could reach $3,600 a ton if the region’s production is lost for one month. The week’s intraday high of $3,418 suggests the market is already pricing a partial scenario.
FIGURE 1 LME Aluminum 3-Month Futures: 12-Month Price History. Daily candlestick chart with 50-day and 200-day moving averages. Aluminum traded in a gradual uptrend from approximately $2,480 per metric ton in March 2025 to near $3,100 by late February 2026, supported by structural supply constraints. The conflict escalation on February 28 triggered a sharp breakout above the $3,300 resistance level, with the intraday high of $3,418 reached on March 4 following the Alba shipment halt. The LME three-month contract closed at $3,306.50 on March 7, up 5.3% for the week and at its highest level since 2021. Sources: London Metal Exchange. For illustrative purposes only.
The Hormuz Risk Runs Both Ways
The standard framing of Gulf aluminum risk focuses on exports: Middle Eastern producers ship finished metal through the Strait of Hormuz to Europe and Asia. That channel is impaired. The more acute risk runs in the opposite direction. Gulf smelters are not self-sufficient in raw materials. The UAE imports approximately 100% of the bauxite and alumina that feeds its smelters, with the majority arriving by sea through the Strait. Qatar’s Qatalum operation sourced alumina primarily from Australia and Brazil via the same route. When the Strait is impaired, inbound raw material flows and outbound metal shipments are disrupted simultaneously.
Smelters typically maintain alumina stockpiles sufficient for three to four weeks of operation. That buffer is enough to absorb a short disruption. Beyond four weeks, smelters face a choice between sourcing emergency alumina at distressed prices via alternative routes, curtailing production, or shutting down entirely. Qatalum’s controlled shutdown this week, triggered by a gas supply interruption rather than an alumina shortage, shows that the vulnerability extends beyond raw materials to the entire infrastructure network of the Gulf.
The LME cash-to-three-month spread shifted into backwardation during the week of March 2, moving from a discount of approximately $15 a ton on the Friday before the conflict to near parity by Wednesday as the shutdowns were announced. Backwardation signals that buyers are willing to pay more for immediate delivery than for future supply. The spread’s rapid tightening in the days following the shutdowns indicates the market was responding to concrete operational events rather than speculative positioning. The Strait of Hormuz remains technically open, but war-risk insurance premiums have surged and a significant number of commercial operators have voluntarily suspended or rerouted transits. The practical effect is a sharp reduction in throughput without a formal closure — a distinction that matters legally for force majeure filings but not for the physical availability of aluminum in European and Asian ports.
Europe Is the Most Exposed Consumer Market
Approximately 30% of European aluminum imports originate from the UAE, according to ING. With primary aluminum already in tight supply before the conflict, a sustained reduction in UAE exports would push European physical premiums significantly higher. The U.S. faces similar but partially cushioned exposure: the Middle East accounts for over 20% of U.S. aluminum imports, but tariff-inflated Midwest premiums limit the immediate price upside.
Emirates Global Aluminum, which operates smelters in Dubai and Abu Dhabi, has not yet declared force majeure as of Friday. The two halts already announced, at Alba and Qatalum, together represent a meaningful share of the 8% of global primary aluminum production concentrated in the region, according to consultancy AZ China. The key variable for European and U.S. buyers is not whether prices rise further from here, but whether EGA remains operational. If EGA follows Qatalum and Alba, the supply disruption would move from significant to structurally severe.
What Current Prices Are Telling You
Three-month aluminum price targets were raised this week to $3,250 a ton. The 12-month target was raised to $3,000. As of Friday’s close, the LME three-month contract is already above both at $3,306.50. Reading those three numbers together produces the article’s central conclusion.
Step one: the 12-month target of $3,000 sitting below current spot is an explicit analyst statement that the current price level is a crisis premium, not a new structural baseline. Analysts expect prices to mean-revert as the situation resolves. Step two: the gap between the $3,000 structural target and the Goldman Sachs scenario of $3,600, cited if the region loses one month of production, defines the market’s pricing range. Step three: Friday’s close at $3,306 sits roughly in the middle of that range, implying the market is pricing approximately half of a full one-month regional production loss.
That middle-range positioning is consistent with the available evidence: two smelters halted, one major producer (EGA) still running, the Strait carrying reduced commercial traffic rather than zero. The neutral directional outlook accompanying the raised targets reflects this balance. Any development that extends the timeline toward a full month of regional output loss should push prices toward $3,600. Any credible Hormuz normalisation or EGA operational confirmation should pull them back toward $3,000.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice or a recommendation to buy or sell any security. All data reflects publicly available information as of March 7, 2026. Investing involves substantial risk including the potential loss of all capital. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Always consult a licensed financial advisor before making investment decisions.




















































