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BLBG: Aluminum Demand May Advance in Asia in 2010 on China Stimulus
 
By Sungwoo Park

Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Aluminum consumption in Asia may continue to grow next year as stimulus measures in China, the world’s biggest metals consumer, and rest of the region lift demand for the metal, an executive at Novelis Korea Ltd. said.

“I still see Asia demand growing,” Sachin Satpute, managing director for business development at Novelis Korea, said in an interview in Seoul today. “Look at China’s massive stimulus measures. It has generated a lot of demand.”

Aluminum prices have surged 32 percent this year as China’s $586 billion stimulus spending increased demand for the metal used in car parts, construction and cans. China’s economy expanded 8.9 percent in the third quarter, the fastest pace in a year. Harbor Intelligence forecasts demand will outstrip supply by 380,000 tons next year and prices will average $2,700. Prices have averaged $1,652 a ton this year.

“Asia used to depend on Western countries for demand generation,” Satpute said. “This year, most aluminum and aluminum products are consumed” within Asia, driven by the stimulus spending, he said.

Novelis Korea, in which Novelis Inc. has a 68 percent stake, is Asia’s largest manufacturer of aluminum rolled products, according to Novelis Korea’s Web site.

“There is overcapacity and overcapacity is in China,” Satpute said. Still, China is different from other parts of the world because “when prices are bad, they close capacity, and when prices are good, they start again,” he said.

Barclays Capital forecasts that the global surplus in aluminum will increase 29 percent to 1.63 million metric tons next year as the biggest annual price increase since 1994 spurs producers to increase output.

To contact the reporter on this story: Sungwoo Park in Seoul at spark47@bloomberg.net.

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