(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters. Repeats Thursday's column with no changes to text)
By Andy Home
LONDON, Jan 25 (Reuters) - China is awash with aluminium.
"Illegal" capacity has been closed and smelters in the region around Beijing are, to varying extents, curtailing output to comply with the winter environmental restrictions. But stocks registered with the Shanghai Futures Exchange (ShFE) continue to build. They surged by 653,411 tonnes last year and were up another 30,000 tonnes at a fresh record high of 783,759 tonnes as of last Friday.
U.S. producer Alcoa told analysts on its Q1 conference call it is forecasting a 1.5-1.7 million tonne surplus in China this year, notwithstanding Beijing's efforts to restrain capacity.
It is also forecasting a bigger deficit of 2.0-2.2 million tonnes in the rest of the world, where visible stocks have been falling for many months.
Inventory registered with the London Metal Exchange (LME) is close to multi-year lows at just 840,000 tonnes, discounting metal awaiting physical load-out.
Unsurprisingly, given such dynamics, the aluminium price in London has been outperforming that in Shanghai .
Equally unsurprisingly, more Chinese aluminium, in the form of semi-manufactured products, has been starting to move through the arbitrage window. December's tally of 390,000 tonnes was the highest since June 2017.
This is how the global aluminium market has historically rebalanced itself, Chinese surplus leaking out as "semis".
TRUMP'S TRADE GUNS
But this year could be very different.
China's aluminium sector has grown hugely over the last decade, its share of global production rising from 25 percent at the start of 2006 to over 50 percent now.
The rest of the world's push-back against this dominance has grown similarly, with the United States taking the lead.
The Barack Obama administration filed a formal complaint to the World Trade Organization (WTO) in its dying days, accusing China of subsidising "certain producers of primary aluminium". Under the Donald Trump administration, things have accelerated.
Preliminary duties on Chinese imports of foil were imposed in October last year, provoking a furious reaction from China, which has itself complained to the WTO. A final determination by the U.S. Commerce Department is scheduled for Feb. 23. In November, the Commerce Department took the unusual step of self-initiating an investigation into imports of Chinese aluminium alloy sheet. A formal investigation has just been launched with the blessing of the U.S. International Trade Commission. And looming larger is the biggest trade gun of them all, the "Section 232" investigation into imports of aluminium on national security grounds.
Launched hot on the heels of a similar steel probe in May last year, the findings have just landed on the president's desk. He has 90 days to decide what, if any action, to take. Will there be tariffs? If so, on what? Ingot or semi-manufactured products? Against China, the largest supplier of semis to the United States? Or against China and others?
The jury is very much out.
Goldman Sachs analysts believe that "the odds are high for Section 232 to result in tariffs on aluminium imports". ("Metals Express", Jan. 24, 2018)
Wood Mackenzie analysts, on the other hand, expect "the Section 232 investigation to be shelved". ("Aluminium: 5 things to look for in 2018", January, 2018)
Wood Mackenzie's big caveat, though, is that the foil and sheet anti-dumping cases will likely go ahead.
"This could considerably impact global premia and the direction of the flow of metal in the World ex-China," it said.
Actually, it may already have started.
U.S. Imports of Plate, Sheet and Strip - top 10 suppliers: CHANGING FLOWS
U.S. imports of primary aluminium and alloy have been booming, up 16 percent at a record 4.52 million tonnes in January-November 2017, according to Wood Mackenzie.
Acting as a magnet is the steady rise in the U.S. Midwest physical premium relative to Europe.
In the bullish premium mix are higher freight rates, tax cuts and expectations of elevated defence and infrastructure spending.
And now, what Wood Mackenzie calls a "rising protectionist stance" is causing "traders to build anticipatory inventories".
If imports of both Chinese sheet and foil are hit with penal duties, the knock-on effect could be to increase demand for primary metal in the rest of the world by 500,000 tonnes, the research house calculates.
Starting with the United States itself, of course.
China has a particular problem if the United States slams the door on common alloy sheet, since it has already saturated many markets outside of the United States.
"It is unlikely that Chinese suppliers of (sheet) will be able to fully redirect export volumes lost due to the U.S. trade action," Wood Mackenzie notes.
Bad news, then, for Chinese sheet manufacturers, but good news for those everywhere else, and good news for those long of physical aluminium in the right place.
Wood Mackenzie expects "U.S. premia will remain supported at over 10 cents/lb at least over the next six months with traders continuing to shift stocks away from Asian and European warehouses betting on further increases in the US premia ahead of looming duties".
RESTARTS?
Of course, part of any tariff-induced hole in the U.S. aluminium supply chain could be filled by smelter restarts.
A domestic plant being revived from the dead would, no doubt, be most welcome political news for the Trump administration.
However, the heyday of the U.S. smelter sector is long gone. Power crises in 2001-2002 killed off many West Coast plants, while financial crisis in 2008-2009 did for many of the rest. The number of those left standing continues to dwindle.
Last month Alcoa announced the permanent closure of its Rockdale smelter in Texas, which had been idle since 2008. The company reversed a similar decision on its Warrick smelter in Indiana last year, but the fact that it "continues to market for sale more than 30,000 acres of land at the Rockdale site" doesn't bode well for any last-minute stay of execution.
That leaves around 700,000 tonnes of capacity that could, on paper, at least, be reactivated.
But the price of power is as important for a restart as the price of aluminium, and that is down to individual smelters' relationship with their local utilities.
While U.S. producers mull their options and Trump mulls the Section 232 report, primary metal trade flows are already starting to adjust.
China's exports of semis, meanwhile, are still running strong. But for how much longer?
<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ China's Aluminium Semi Exports Aluminium Price US imports of plate, sheet, strip ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Editing by Kevin Liffey)
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