| Column:  LME storage capacity falls as politics upend metal flows: Andy Home 
 reuters.com Andy Home
 
 August 26, 202511:15 PM PDTUpdated 7 hours ago
 
 LONDON,  Aug 27 (Reuters) - The London Metal Exchange's (LME) global warehousing  capacity shrank by 4.25% over the first half of 2025 despite the  opening of new delivery locations in Hong Kong and the Saudi Arabian  port of Jeddah.
 
 Total  registered storage space of 3.2 million square meters is now at its  lowest level since the exchange started publishing its quarterly updates  in 2016.
 
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 The  shrinkage is down to sliding exchange inventory. Total stocks,  including off-warrant stocks, fell by 541,000 metric tons over the first  half of 2025 and closed June at a 20-month low of 1.62 million tons.
 
 Low stocks should be a bullish signal for base metal prices but it's one that is currently distorted by geopolitical turbulence.
 
 
  
 LME warehouse capacity and quarterly change
 
 DIVERTED METAL
 Aluminium  has for many years been the mainstay of the LME warehousing business.  The global production base of 65 million tons is a lot larger than any  of the other LME metals and smelters have historically been slow to  respond to drops in demand because of the costs of idling capacity.
 
 Surplus  metal has in the past gravitated to the market of last resort. There  were over three million tons of aluminium in LME storage as recently as  2021. Combined on- and off-warrant stocks now total just 717,000 tons.
 
 Is this a sign of a market in supply deficit? It's difficult to say because the  April 2024 ban on new deliveries of Russian metal has deprived the market of one of its biggest physical liquidity providers.
 
 Ever  more Russian metal is flowing eastwards to China in response to U.S.,  UK and European sanctions. China's imports of Russian aluminium surged  by 80% year-on-year to 1.1 million tons in January-June.
 
 This  year's hike in U.S. import tariffs has further disrupted global flows  of the light metal, leaving little available for LME storage despite  lucrative warehouse deals.
 
 It's  telling that ISTIM UK Ltd, the LME warehouse operator at the centre of  several big aluminium stock plays in Port Klang, has cut its presence in  the Malaysian city from 22 to 13 units over the last twelve months.
 Despite  other operators stepping into the gap, total storage capacity at Port  Klang declined by 15% over the first six months of the year.
 
 COPPER CLEAR-OUT
 Copper  bulls got very excited when LME stocks were raided in the second  quarter but the near depletion of exchange inventory had nothing to do  with demand and everything to do with U.S. President Donald Trump.
 
 Trump's  announcement he was launching an investigation into copper imports on  national security grounds in February opened up an unprecedented  arbitrage between the U.S. duty-paid price traded on the CME and the  international price traded in London.
 
 LME  warehouses were stripped as inventory was shipped to the United States.  U.S. imports of refined copper surged to 724,000 tons between March and  June, equivalent to 80% of the country's import demand last year.
 CME  registered copper stocks are at a 21-year high of 247,210 tons, while  LME inventory of 155,000 tons is still down by 43% on the start of 2025  despite some replenishment from Chinese smelters.
 
 The tariff threat turned out to be  unfounded but caused a massive redistribution of inventory without making much change to the global exchange stocks picture.
 
 
  
 Changes in LME warehouse units by location
 
 SINGAPORE CHURN
 LME  zinc stocks have also been cleared out over the last couple of months.  Registered tonnage has fallen by 72% since the start of the year and at  65,525 tons is the lowest it's been since May 2023.
 Yet time-spreads remain curiously relaxed, the benchmark cash-to-three-months period still trading in small contango.
 
 The  market's apparent lack of concern reflects a recent history of zinc  stocks churn at Singapore. The city has been the focal point for LME  deliveries of both zinc and lead and currently accounts for 99% and 97%  of all registered inventory respectively.
 
 It's  thus no surprise that LME warehouse operators have opened more units in  Singapore than anywhere else over the last 12 months.
 
 The  number of listed warehouses in the city has increased by nine to 38,  outstripping the eight new listings in Hong Kong and the four in Jeddah  after the ports opened for LME business in January and July  respectively.
 
 The  current conundrum is that the lead is still there, although still  churning judging by last week's spate of cancellations, but the zinc has  gone missing.
 
 For now
 
 The  rising count of LME storage units in Singapore suggests warehouse  operators are betting there's still a lot of zinc around for potential  LME delivery.
 
 WAITING FOR METAL
 
 Sanctions  and tariffs have combined to reduce metal flows to the LME with  trickle-down impact on the exchange's physical storage function.
 
 The  good news for LME warehouse companies is that disruption can open new  opportunities. Hong Kong warehouses started receiving copper almost as  soon as they opened thanks to Chinese smelters delivering metal into a  market that was tight after the CME arbitrage trade.
 
 The less good news is that Russia, a major aluminium, copper and zinc producer, is increasingly turning to the Chinese market.
 
 The growing trade between the two countries may not be easily reversed, even in the unlikely event that sanctions are lifted.
 
 LME  storage capacity has fallen by over a quarter since the start of the  decade, when over four million tons of metal were being stored.
 
 Neither  stocks nor storage seem likely to grow back to those levels any time  soon, given the potential for politics to further fracture what was once  a highly globalised physical metals market.
 
 The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.
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