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  • Aluminium surges as Hormuz risk turns into a deliverability shock

    Aluminum’s jump is a reminder that metals markets can reprice logistics risk almost as fast as oil does when a chokepoint becomes questionable. The rally on the LME, more than 3% intraday and the strongest since January, is being driven less by a sudden change in end-use demand and more by the prospect that Middle East producers may struggle to move metal and secure inputs if the Strait of Hormuz and adjacent Gulf shipping lanes remain impaired.

    The Middle East’s role in aluminum is big enough to matter, roughly a tenth of global smelting capacity, and the region is unusually exposed because it imports a significant share of the upstream bauxite and alumina feedstock used by its smelters while exporting most of its primary metal by sea.

    March 2, 2026
  • China’s next five-year plan becomes commodities’ global playbook

    China’s next five-year plan will be read by commodity markets less like a domestic policy document and more like a global operating manual. Because China sits at the center of demand for metals, energy and agricultural imports, its growth target, stimulus posture and preferred industrial sectors still provide the most obvious clues about where consumption will expand or stall.

    The more consequential and harder-to-interpret part, however, is the supply-side agenda: Beijing is increasingly trying to redesign how much the country produces, where it produces it, and under what regulatory constraints, sometimes to increase strategic resilience, sometimes to stop price wars and losses, and sometimes to hit climate goals that force a reordering of heavy industry.

    March 2, 2026
  • U.S. copper panic fades, but tariff distortion keeps reshaping flows

    The immediate U.S. copper panic may have faded, but the underlying tariff-driven distortion is still reshaping global flows, and it is leaving the United States with a quietly enormous pile of refined metal. The eye-catching “physical premium” for delivering copper into the U.S. has largely disappeared since the White House delayed a decision on refined-copper tariffs, which temporarily crushed the simple arbitrage between CME pricing and the London Metal Exchange benchmark.

    Yet instead of reverting to normal trade patterns, imports re-accelerated late in the year: inbound refined copper jumped again to almost 200,000 tonnes in December, pushing inventories higher even as the spot spread flipped to a CME discount versus the LME.

    March 2, 2026
  • Asia convenes emergency energy reviews as Hormuz traffic stalls

    Asia’s immediate response to the Hormuz disruption has been less about “panic buying” and more about triage: how long existing inventories can cover runs, which cargoes are already committed, which routes remain insurable, and what substitute barrels can realistically be sourced on short notice.

    Governments and refiners across the region convened emergency assessments as tanker movements slowed sharply around the Strait of Hormuz, which normally carries around one-fifth of global oil consumption and a similarly critical share of seaborne LNG.

    March 2, 2026
  • Container giants reroute as Iran strike fallout shuts key sea lanes

    The rerouting decisions by Maersk, Hapag-Lloyd and CMA CGM are a textbook example of how a regional military shock becomes a global trade shock: once the perceived war-risk crosses a threshold, liner operators don’t “wait and see” inside chokepoints, they de-risk by adding thousands of nautical miles and days of sailing time.

    After U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran and Iran’s warning that the Strait of Hormuz was closed for navigation, the carriers moved to pause Trans-Suez services and divert ships around the Cape of Good Hope, effectively stepping back from both the Suez Canal corridor and the Bab el-Mandeb gateway into the Red Sea.

    March 2, 2026
  • OPEC+ adds 206,000 bpd, but Hormuz risk still sets the price

    OPEC+’s decision to add 206,000 barrels a day from April looks, on paper, like the group returning to its familiar role as shock absorber. In practice, it is closer to a signaling move than a market-stabilizing one, because the price problem right now is not primarily about how much crude can be produced; it is about how much crude can physically move.

    With tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz reportedly halted and shipowners treating the route as effectively closed for navigation, the market is being priced off logistics and security rather than off the usual balance-of-supply-and-demand models. In that environment, a modest quota increase that equals a tiny fraction of global supply does not offset the perceived loss of an entire export artery.

    March 2, 2026
  • Hormuz fears return as investors brace for prolonged regional war

    The market’s relationship with Middle East risk has abruptly changed character. What had long been treated as a tail-risk that flared and faded is now being priced as a central macro variable, because the weekend’s U.S. and Israeli strikes on Iran have injected both wartime uncertainty and a regime-succession question into the same shock.

    Investors are reacting not only to the immediate consequences, but to the fact that the next steps inside Iran’s political system are inherently opaque, which makes it harder to bound the duration and intensity of the conflict.

    March 2, 2026
  • Brent seen holding $80-$90 until shipping normalizes

    The Strait of Hormuz is a narrow physical constraint that normally allows the Gulf to express its supply abundance to the world; once shipping risk spikes and tanker traffic thins, the price-setting problem becomes immediate, because the marginal barrel is no longer determined by production capacity but by what can safely move.

    That’s why analysts are warning that oil prices can stay elevated for days even if the longer-run balance still points toward surplus. The specific forecasts map onto a common framework: near-term prices are being driven by an unusually large risk premium, and the premium’s size depends on the duration and severity of any restriction through Hormuz.

    March 2, 2026

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