Alert! Aluminium prices have hit a new low! On Nov 6, Aluminium prices on LME (London Metal Exchange) fell to a two-week low. The prices were hit by a sudden wave of "risk-off" sentiment in the global equity markets. The benchmark aluminium hit $2,831.50/metric ton. This was its lowest point since Oct 23, 2025, before settling at $2,838.50. The price plunge is a sharp and painful reversal from the high of $2,920 seen on Monday, this week. Also, the Monday price jump was its strongest level since May 2022. As of Nov 7 (11:40:01 IST), the Aluminium price is $2,838.5.
A sell-off on Wall Street had immediately triggered the slide. The technology stocks had come under fresh pressure and they eventually dragged down the entire base metals complex. This macroeconomic fear was potent enough to completely offset an otherwise bullish narrative of tightening supply and strong demand prospects from China. Thus, the metal give-up their recent gains rather quickly. Now, there is an important question for investors: is the fundamental bullish case for aluminium still intact, or is this the beginning of a deeper correction for the entire base metals pack?
The ‘aluminium prices fall’ is a classic case of macro fears outweighing micro fundamentals. Aluminium was trading considerably higher earlier in the session. The positive physical market data had supported it to rise. This momentum shifted mid-day as Wall Street opened lower. Further, it triggered a cascade of sell orders across asset classes, including industrial metals.
Thus, traders seem to be more focused on the big picture than on the specific supply-and-demand story for aluminium. There are several factors fuelling this anxiety.
For a brief moment, this sentiment has broken the positive momentum in metals like copper and aluminium. These metals had recently hit multi-year highs. This shows that macro-economic fears are momentarily outweighing physical market tightness. However, just how tight is that physical market?
Before this pullback, the bullish narrative for aluminium was becoming overwhelmingly strong. Many funds had built large positions in the LME aluminium contract. There were two main pillars to the bullish stance.
A Tighter Chinese Market - China is the world's largest producer and consumer of aluminium. The demand in China is strong. More importantly, investors have been betting for months that the era of "chronic oversupply" is ending. This is because production in China is running up against the government's official capacity cap.
Soaring Physical Premiums - The European aluminium premium is also supporting the price rise. The price buyers actually pay on top of the LME benchmark, has surged. It rose from $183 in Jun to $328, and even briefly hit $330 in Feb. This is a real-world signal that the physical metal is scarce.
This fundamental strength is exactly what ignited the rally in Indian metal stocks just a few weeks ago. So, what does this sharp reversal mean for those positions?
This volatility in the global commodity price has a direct and immediate impact on Indian metal producers like Hindalco, Vedanta, and NALCO. Their stock prices are highly correlated with the LME benchmark.
Just look back to late Oct 2025. On Oct 24, as LME aluminium prices broke out and topped the $2,850/tonne level, Indian metal stocks were "trading on a robust note". Hindalco was up 3.5% and Nalco surged 4.3% in a single day, with technical charts at that time suggesting another potential rally of 17-18%
That rally was predicated on the LME price holding those breakout levels. Now, with Thursday's drop, the LME price has fallen back below its critical support. This pullback puts the recent technical breakouts in those Indian stocks at immediate risk of failing.
Even copper which had hit a record high just last week, has slipped 0.2%. This has signalled a broad-based, sentiment-driven pause for the entire metals and mining sector. Investors in Indian metal stocks are now caught in a tug-of-war.
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