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LME reliance, domestic aims drive Jakarta Ni index plan

  • Market: Battery materials, Metals
  • 09/06/23

The Indonesian government's plan to launch a nickel price index may be motivated by intentions to cut dependence on London Metal Exchange (LME) prices, cover wider products in the industrial chain, and accelerate downstream market development, market participants told Argus.

Indonesia — the world's largest nickel producer — will not prioritise a tax or ban on the export of low-grade nickel products such as nickel pig iron (NPI) in the near term, according to senior official in the co-ordinating ministry for maritime and investment affairs Septian Hario Seto.

Indonesia's Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry (ESDM) introduced a nickel ore benchmark price called Harga Patokan Mineral (HPM) in October 2020, after it imposed a ban on ore exports in January 2020. The ESDM uses a formula which is linked to LME nickel prices to set up the benchmark, using parameters such as the ore grade, moisture content, correction factors formulated by the Indonesian government and the Harga Mineral Acuan (HMA) which is the average LME cash official price for the previous two months.

Few nickel smelters in Indonesia used the benchmark when it was just introduced, with their ore purchases done at lower prices than the benchmark, although the Indonesian government wanted to create such a benchmark to calculate taxes more effectively, market participants told Argus. More nickel smelters started to comply with the benchmark when ore demand increased significantly to 1.58mn t of nickel metal equivalent in 2022 from 767,000t in 2020, according to data from International Nickel Study Group (INSG), and stable ore supplies became critical to nickel smelters. Smelters' compliance with the benchmark has increased the government's tax revenues and mines' incomes, and strengthened the government's influence on the resource market.

The new nickel index will most likely include NPI, which is increasingly processed into nickel matte by producers, market participants told Argus.

Indonesia became the global largest nickel producer in 2021. The country produced 1.16mn t of nickel metal equivalent in 2022, including NPI but excluding nickel intermediates mixed hydroxide precipitate (MHP) and nickel matte, up sharply from 878,700t in 2021, according to INSG data. This subsequently resulted in surplus supplies. NPI prices were around 80pc of LME nickel prices in 2018 and only neared LME prices when supplies are tight. The proportion fell to 60pc of LME prices in December 2022 and bounced to 70pc recently. This led the Indonesian government to be of the opinion that NPI is being sold off too cheaply and China's import prices for NPI from Indonesia are not transparent, according to market participants.

Nickel smelters also said feedstock costs are too high if the ore pricing is linked to the LME. The overwhelming majority of NPI production is used in the stainless steel industry, but LME prices can only reflect market conditions for nickel cathode, which is priced higher than NPI and often heavily influenced by the financial market instead of supply and demand factors. This has left nickel smelters facing high feedstock costs and low NPI prices, with hopes that a new price index covering more products in various industrial chains such as stainless steel and electric vehicle (EV) batteries can be launched.

Indonesia exported 2.05mn t of NPI, or 270,000t nickel metal equivalent, to China in the first four months of 2023, up by 46pc from a year earlier, customs data show. Argus forecasts total NPI output in Indonesia will reach 1.36mn t of metal equivalent this year.

Downstream developments

A new price index could also benefit Indonesia's developments in the downstream new energy vehicle (NEV) and battery markets, according to market participants.

The Indonesian government has reiterated its intention to impose restrictions on nickel exports, with a 2pc tax for material containing less than 70pc of nickel from 2022. The aim is to limit Indonesia's primary nickel exports and stimulate investment in products with a higher added value. But the tax has not been implemented until now and the government recently said it would delay the tax and launch a price index.

Two stainless steel producers in Indonesia — with a combined capacity of 7mn t/yr — produced a total of 4.85mn t of crude stainless steel in 2022, ranking second in the world, data compiled by Argus show.

EV sales are forecast to rise to almost a fifth of global total car sales this year, according to data from IEA, with sales in Indonesia more than tripling last year.

Indonesia's Kalimantan region — which houses the North Kalimantan Industrial Estate (KIPI) that is currently under development by a private consortium — is set to receive close to 40pc of the country's new investment tied to the development of supply chains for the battery industry by 2026, according to co-ordinating minister for maritime and investment affairs Luhut Pandjaitan.

Ni ore benchmark price fob with 30pc moisture content ($/wmt)
ContentOct '20May '23change ± %
1.7pc32.2649.8654.56
1.8pc36.0555.7354.59
1.9pc40.0658.7846.73

Global primary nickel output during 2017-23 '000t

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EU stainless safeguards, metal plan meet mixed reaction


31/03/25
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31/03/25

EU stainless safeguards, metal plan meet mixed reaction

London, 31 March (Argus) — Europe's stainless steel industry has had a mixed reaction to the European Commission's safeguard steel review and its action plan to protect the bloc's metals industry, both announced on 11 March. Steelmakers have welcomed greater commitment from policy makers to support the sector, but are still concerned at a lack of concrete commitment to significant protectionist measures, while traders, service centres and scrap suppliers are worried the most radical proposals could severely damage their businesses. The European Commission's review of definitive safeguard measures on imports of certain steel products identified no new import pressure for stainless cold rolled sheets and strips, and left tariff rate quotas for the next 15 months virtually unchanged even as carryovers and unused quota access were removed. 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28/03/25
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28/03/25

US consumer confidence down on policy angst

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UK steel importers oppose other countries' caps


28/03/25
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28/03/25

UK steel importers oppose other countries' caps

London, 28 March (Argus) — Steel importers in the UK suggest the imposition of a cap on any other countries' quotas could effectively stop trade, given the small volume of the quotas. In a recent submission to the Trade Remedies Authority, UK Steel said 15pc caps should be introduced on other countries quotas for hot-dip galvanised, plate and rebar. But in its submission to the TRA, trading firm Salzgitter Mannesmann argues that any cap based on a percentage of the quota "will ultimately most likely remove rather than reduce imports as shipments from many third countries, notably the far east, require a certain base volume to ship economically to the UK". Other trading firms and service centres told Argus they share the same view. Salzgitter Mannesmann also suggested a new country quotas for individual importers be added to the safeguard based on their imports over the past two or three years. The only local producer of hot-dip galvanised coil, Tata Steel, would be likely to argue against this as volumes from some countries, notably Vietnam, have increased dramatically in recent years. Salzgitter Mannesmann also suggests Tata Steel cannot produce hot-rolled coil over 1.85m wide, for which the UK has to totally rely on imports. Traders have for some time argued that there should be no import constraints on material, such as 2m wide, as there can be no injury to the producer on grades it cannot produce. Service centre Sebden Steel said the current measures make it "impossible" for the UK to be flooded with cheap foreign imports, and that people are "misinformed by mainstream media and UK Steel". "The UK producer is in a safe place already and any additional measures will only serve to cause injury to independent steel service centres, independent steel stockholders and the UK manufacturing base, which will all be faced with a further tightening of the supply chain and increased costs," it said. Importers, unsurprisingly, question why Tata Steel, now a re-roller until its electric arc furnaces are installed, can import on much more favourable terms than others. Tata has a much bigger quota than the rest of the market, at around 2.3mn t, but the main problem for importers is that the company has fewer constraints on where it can source, with only a 40pc cap on any given country within that quota. Independent service centres, which all compete with Tata Distribution, can only import much smaller quantities from different locations, given the fragmented composition of quotas; the other countries quota for 1A, for example, is less than 100,000 t/yr. EU mills have far and away the largest quota to sell 1A HRC into the UK, but given their higher costs compared with Asian producers, they struggle to compete; Tata's imports come from all over the world, as well as some from its sister mill in IJmuiden, the Netherlands. By Colin Richardson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Australia's Aurelia Metals to boost Cu, Zn processing


28/03/25
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28/03/25

Australia's Aurelia Metals to boost Cu, Zn processing

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