Are China’s Surging Aluminum Exports A Harbinger Of Future Export Levels?

 | Jun 18, 2018 02:46AM ET

China could be said to be making hay while the sun shines.

A report in AluminiumInsider quotes China’s General Administration of Customs , saying the country’s total exports last month came to 485,000 metric tons, accounting for the second-highest total in the administration’s record-keeping history.

May’s output beat April’s total of 451,000 metric tons by 7.5% and bested May shipments a year earlier of 430,000 metric tons (a 12.8% increase). Only December 2014 had been higher at 542,700 metric tons.

But suggestions that this is the start of a flood may be premature.

h2 The Impact of U.S. Tariffs/h2

Exports to the U.S. will be cramped by the U.S. administration’s 10% general import tax on aluminum products and ban on foil.

U.S. import tariffs will also hit suppliers in the Americas and Europe, probably limiting their exports to the U.S. — at least in the short term — and making any increase in Chinese sales of metal into Europe even less welcome than it has previously been.

The E.U. has rushed in an import licensing scheme to monitor imports, in part designed to track where rising volumes of steel and aluminum imports are coming from so that future action can be targeted.