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Bank of Japan Governor Kazuo Ueda will hold a monetary policy press conference in ten minutes.On January 24, according to the State Administration for Market Regulation, in order to standardize the reporting of online transaction compliance data and improve regulatory efficiency, the State Administration for Market Regulation issued the "Interim Measures for the Management of Online Transaction Compliance Data Reporting" and solicited public opinions. The public can provide feedback through the official website of the State Administration for Market Regulation, email or letter. The deadline is February 23, 2025.HSBC: Raised Microsoft (MSFT.O) price target from $554 to $566.Chris Scicluna, head of European research at Daiwa Capital Markets, said on January 24 that the Bank of Japans decision to raise its policy rate to 0.5% shows that the central bank is determined to guide the economy out of decades of ultra-low interest rates. Although the rate hike itself is widely expected, the real significance lies in the signal sent by the Bank of Japan that Japan may finally be ready for monetary policy normalization. The current policy rate is the highest level since 2008, and the Bank of Japan seems to want to push it to a new high since 1995. "The Bank of Japan has embarked on a journey that will test how far it can go without shaking the countrys fragile consumption or broader financial stability."On January 24, on January 23, 2025 (the 10th day of the Spring Festival, the 24th day of the twelfth lunar month), the cross-regional flow of people in the whole society was 256.519 million, a month-on-month increase of 9.7% and a year-on-year increase of 32.3%. The railway passenger volume was 13.168 million, a month-on-month decrease of 1.2%, and a year-on-year increase of 7.4%. The road personnel flow (including non-commercial passenger car personnel travel volume on expressways and ordinary national and provincial roads, and commercial passenger volume on highways) was 240.25 million, a month-on-month increase of 10.5%, and a year-on-year increase of 34.3%. Among them, the commercial passenger volume on highways was 34.62 million, a month-on-month increase of 2.1%, and a year-on-year increase of 32.4%; the non-commercial passenger car personnel travel volume on expressways and ordinary national and provincial roads was 205.63 million, a month-on-month increase of 12%, and a year-on-year increase of 34.6%.

Aluminum Hits 13-Year High on global energy crisis

Eden

Oct 26, 2021 11:02

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Aluminum jumped to the highest since 2008 as a deepening power crisis squeezes supplies of the energy-intensive metal that’s used in everything from beer cans to iPhones.


Industry insiders like to joke that aluminum is basically “solid electricity.” Each ton of metal takes about 14 megawatt hours of power to produce, enough to run an average U.K. home for more than three years. If the 65 million ton-a-year aluminum industry was a country, it would rank as the fifth-largest power consumer in the world.


That meant aluminium was one of the first targets in China’s efforts to curb industrial energy usage. Even beyond the current power crisis, Beijing has placed a hard cap on future capacity that promises to end years of over-expansion and raises the prospect of deep global deficits. Now, with energy costs surging across Asia and Europe, there’s growing risk of further supply cuts.


Aluminium rose as much as 2.5% to $3,040 a ton on the London Metal Exchange Monday, the highest since July 2008.


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For investors looking to bet on a future price spike, LME options contracts offer a popular and low-risk way.


In recent weeks, investors have been buying calls with strike prices of up to $4,000 a ton, according to traders active in the market -- effectively betting that prices could move significantly beyond that level to reach new all-time highs.


“It feels very much like a structural hedge-fund play,” said Keith Wildie, head of trading at Romco Metals, who’s been trading LME options for more than 20 years. “What they’re positioning for is a significant market dislocation, and a sharp move higher in the price.”


As the global metals world prepared to gather in London for the annual LME Week, signs of pressure on the aluminium industry have continued to mount. China’s State Council announced Friday it will allow higher power prices in a bid to ease the worsening energy crunch. In the Netherlands, aluminium producer Aldel will curtail production from this week due to high electricity prices, Dutch Broadcaster NOS reported.


A number of aluminium plants in China are being mothballed and the country’s production has probably peaked, at least in the short term, said Mark Hansen, chief executive officer at London-based trading house Concord Resources Ltd. With the market in a deficit and needing to stimulate investment in new production outside China, prices could hit $3,400 a ton in the next 12 months, he said.


Next, traders and analysts say investors are watching for a possible hit to Chinese aluminium exports. With its own production under pressure and demand booming, the country has been importing ever-greater quantities of primary metal. However, it’s still exporting huge volumes of semi-finished aluminium, in part supported by tax rebates.


“Given the acuteness of the power shortages and the curtailments we’ve seen, it just doesn’t seem rational for China to be exporting that volume of aluminium products every single month,” James Luke, commodities fund manager at Schroders, said by phone from London. “It’s essentially just a net export of energy resources.”


Analysts including at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. say there’s potential for Beijing to lower or remove the value-added tax rebates on exports to slow the flow of metal beyond its borders. With China likely to continue importing huge volumes of aluminium next year, that could leave the rest of the world desperately short, and raises the risk of a violent price spike.


Separately, prices got an extra boost Monday after the European Union imposed an anti-dumping duty on flat-rolled aluminium from China, although it excluded some key material, including metal used by the drinks cans, car and aircraft industries.


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This year’s surge in aluminium prices would typically prompt producers elsewhere to reopen old plants and consider adding new supply. Yet the even-bigger jump in power costs is putting pressure on smelters and may make restarts difficult.


As an example, if a smelter in Germany was exposed to one-month baseload rates for power, it would need to pay about $4,000 for the energy needed to produce a ton of metal, far outstripping current aluminium prices.


“The global metal market in 2022 will be the tightest it’s ever been,” Eoin Dinsmore, head of aluminium primary and products research at CRU, said by phone from London. “The rest of the world cannot deliver these quantities to China indefinitely.”