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Damage to major smelters has created a ~2 million ton aluminum supply deficit, the largest since 2000. Even with positive news like the Strait of Hormuz reopening, this physical gap remains. This creates an asymmetric risk where good news doesn't fix the core problem, but bad news could significantly worsen it.

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Every 10 days the Strait of Hormuz is closed, a 200-million-barrel physical gap is created in the global oil flow. This is not a temporary kink but a massive hole in the supply chain that will take months to resolve and normalize, even long after transit resumes.

Recent attacks on aluminum plants are uniquely damaging. A sudden power loss causes infrastructure to freeze, necessitating a year-long restart process. With inventories already low, this prolonged outage of 4% of global supply could trigger a severe deficit and push prices past $4,000 per ton.

A dangerous disconnect exists between oil futures prices, which seem muted, and the physical market. Experts warn of a catastrophic global supply shortage if the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, highlighting a significant tail risk that financial markets are currently underpricing.

The primary cost in producing aluminum is electricity, leading smelters to be built in regions with the cheapest energy, like the Middle East (using cheap natural gas). This makes aluminum prices highly reactive to disruptions in local energy markets, not just the global supply of bauxite ore.

Geopolitical conflicts create ripple effects beyond obvious commodities like oil. They disrupt foundational materials like aluminum and fertilizer, which are critical, yet often overlooked, components in everything from cars and cans to the food supply, revealing hidden supply chain vulnerabilities.

The critical threat to aluminum production isn't shipping finished goods, but the reliance on imported alumina. Regional smelters hold only 20-30 days of raw material inventory, meaning a sustained shipping disruption will force widespread production shutdowns within weeks, severely tightening the market.

The disruption in the Persian Gulf affects not just the headline commodities of oil and gas, but also crucial dry bulk goods. Outbound fertilizers and aluminum, along with inbound raw materials for production, are significantly impacted, causing spikes in global markets for these specific goods.

Even if a major supply disruption is resolved quickly, the system does not instantly recover. Delayed shipments and depleted inventories create a systemic "air pocket" that keeps prices elevated for several quarters as the complex supply chain slowly renormalizes, a crucial lag often overlooked in initial forecasts.

Even a short-term crisis can create a prolonged aluminum shortage. It takes only a month to shut down a smelter, but restarting that same facility can take six months. This operational asymmetry means that supply is destroyed far more quickly than it can be restored, locking in market tightness.

While markets focus on oil prices and de-escalation timelines, they are underestimating second-order effects of geopolitical conflict. Significant risks exist from supply shortages in less-discussed industrial commodities like helium and sulfur, which can have a tangible, negative impact on the broader business cycle.