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US extends deadline for Rusal sanctions, aluminium prices dive

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WASHINGTON/MOSCOW: The United States on Monday gave American customers of Russia’s biggest aluminium producer more time to comply with sanctions, and said it would consider lifting them if United Company Rusal Plc’s major shareholder, Russian tycoon Oleg Deripaska, ceded control of the company.


Aluminium prices on the London Metal Exchange tumbled 8.7 per cent on the US Treasury Department announcement, which gives Rusal longer to sell off large quantities of aluminium it had been stockpiling in the wake of sanctions.


Last week, aluminium prices rallied to their highest in years after Washington, in response to what it called “malign activities” by Russia, imposed the sanctions that will in effect choke off access for Deripaska’s businesses to the international financial system.


Treasury gave Americans until October 23 instead of June 5 to wind down business with Rusal.


It said it would not impose secondary sanctions on non-US entities engaged with Rusal or its subsidiaries.


Shares in Rusal, one of the world’s largest aluminium companies, jumped 17.7 per cent on the Moscow Exchange. Earlier, Rusal had ended Hong Kong trading down 8.4 per cent.


Shares of its US rival Alcoa Corp slid 13.5 per cent on the New York stock exchange.


“Rusal has felt the impact of US sanctions because of its entanglement with Oleg Deripaska, but the US government is not targeting the hardworking people who depend on Rusal and its subsidiaries,” US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin said.


Workers at one of Russia’s biggest aluminium smelters say their Siberian town is doomed unless Moscow mitigates US sanctions against Rusal, a predicament mirrored across the company’s sprawling operations.


Deripaska owns a 48 per cent stake in Rusal “and controls the company via his shareholder agreement with other owners,” said Oleg Petropavlovsky, a senior analyst at BCS Global Markets.“It is not clear whether potential cancellation of this shareholder agreement would be enough” to satisfy US officials, he said.


European leaders have worked to persuade US President Donald Trump to ease sanctions on Russia, with the president of France poised to visit the White House this week.


Mnuchin said “impact on our partners and allies” factored into the reprieve.


French sources said initial feedback had been “constructive.” Rusal now has more time to sell off its supply.


Even if sanctions are not ultimately lifted, buyers also have more time to seek other suppliers.


Last week, aluminium rallied to its highest since mid-2011 on fears the global market could face shortages as a result of the US sanctions.


It remains up more than 16 per cent this month.


Wood Mackenzie analysts said Treasury’s announcement provides “much-needed breathing space” for the aluminium market, adding “We expect near-term correction and volatility” in prices.


Edward Meir, an analyst at INTL FCStone, said there is potential for Rusal to survive and that “the 5m (million) tonnes of Rusal production that a week ago was arguably radioactive, will no longer be so.” — Reuters


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