MORNING VIEW: Aluminium leads on the upside, other base metals shy away from the highs

Aluminium prices on the London Metal Exchange set fresh multi-year highs on Wednesday April 21, while copper and tin shied away from previous highs, and the rest remain rangebound this morning.

  • India reported 315,000 new Covid-19 infections on Wednesday
  • Haven assets on the rise

Base metals
LME three-month base metals prices were down across the board by an average of 0.4% this morning, but volume has been low with just 2,681 lots traded as of 6.05am London time. This compares with an average across Monday to Wednesday closer to 4,400 lots at a similar time of day. Nickel ($16,120 per tonne) led on the downside with a 0.7% decline, while aluminium ($2,357.50 per tonne) and zinc ($2,807.50 per tonne) were down the least with 0.3% falls. Copper was off by 0.4% at $9,407.50 per tonne.

The most-active base metals contracts on the Shanghai Futures Exchange were mixed, with the June copper and aluminium contracts up by 0.4% and 1% respectively, with copper at 69,200 yuan ($10,652) per tonne, while the rest of the base metals were down by an average of 0.4%.

Precious metals
Spot gold ($1,794.22 per oz) and silver ($26.52 per oz) were little changed this morning compared with Wednesday’s closes, but they were up from where they were at a similar time on Wednesday, when they were at $1,783.12 and $25.92 respectively. Platinum ($1,215.40 per oz) was up by 0.3% and palladium (2,873.50 per oz) was down by 0.3%.

Wider markets
The yield on US 10-year treasuries has slipped again this morning and was recently quoted at 1.53%, this after 1.56% at a similar time on Wednesday.

Asian-Pacific equities were mainly stronger on Thursday: the Hang Seng (+0.44%), the Kospi (+0.16%), the ASX 200 (+0.67%) and the Nikkei (+2.12%), while the CSI 300 (-0.23%) was lower.

Currencies
The US Dollar Index was consolidating in low ground this morning and was recently quoted at 91.11, for now holding above Tuesday’s low of 90.85.

The other major currencies were also consolidating this morning: the euro (1.2034), the Australian dollar (0.7744), sterling (1.3934) and the yen (108.05).

Key data
Thursday’s economic data includes industrial order expectations from the Confederation of British Industry, EU consumer confidence and US data on initial jobless claims, leading indicators, and existing home sales.

In addition, the European Central Bank will issue its monetary policy statement, set its main refinancing rate and hold a press conference.

Today’s key themes and views
So far only aluminium has been able to push the envelope on the upside, copper and tin tried to as well but overhead selling dominated, while zinc and nickel remain entrenched in sideways channels and lead’s rebound ran out of momentum mid-range.

With the major Wall Street indices also challenging recent highs again, after only brief pauses earlier in the week, it does look like the markets are in risk-on mode again and the metals may well take their direction from Wall Street. We are, however, wary that gold, the yen and bond yields suggest a pick-up in haven demand, which ties in with our medium-term view that we feel a broad market correction is overdue.

Gold prices are on the rise again after a brief pause on Monday, the weaker dollar and bond yields no doubt providing support, but we would not be surprised if the rise in gold reflects some investors positioning themselves in case a broader market correction unfolds.


What to read next
The Trump administration has concluded its investigation against Brazil under Section 301, with the country’s Trade Representative Jamieson Greer proposing a 25% tariff on the South American country’s imports but putting forth a list of exempted items.
Half a million tonnes of copper is sitting in US warehouses, and the traders who put it there are starting to wonder whether they’ve built a hedge, or a trap.
European automotive procurement faces growing complexity due to regional cost volatility and policy-driven supply chains reshaping material pricing and sourcing strategies. This demands granular, region-specific market intelligence for precise cost modeling and strategic decision-making.
The Strait of Hormuz, through which roughly 20% of global oil and liquefied natural gas (LNG) flows, has been closed for three months since US-Israeli strikes on Iran began on February 28, driving up energy costs and putting Europe's aluminium sector under pressure.
USMCA-driven localization is strengthening automotive supply chains, improving resilience and reducing certain cost risks. But as production spans multiple stages across the US–Mexico corridor, OEMs need clearer visibility into how costs build across regions to maintain margin control.
The assessment, which currently follows the UK holiday calendar, will follow the Singapore holiday calendar after the proposed change. There will be no change to the publication timing, and the assessment will continue to be published weekly on Wednesdays, at 7pm Singapore time. The purpose of the adjustment is to align the timing to the […]