Generic Hero BannerGeneric Hero Banner
Latest market news

US cobalt supply set to tighten under Trump tariffs

  • Market: Metals
  • 27/11/24

US president-elect Donald Trump's plan to impose new tariffs against China, Mexico and Canada appears set to tighten cobalt metal supplies in the US, as one of the three western brands accepted for most aerospace uses will likely be affected.

Trump on the evening of 25 November wrote on his Truth Social platform that he would impose a new 10pc tariff on Chinese goods in addition to a pre-existing 25pc duty on Chinese cobalt, and 25pc duties on Canadian and Mexican goods entering the US.

While the impact of the tariff on Chinese metal entering the US would be largely "irrelevant", according to trading firms, the tariff on Canadian cobalt metal could tighten its supply to the US' aerospace market. Brazilian mining group Vale produces cobalt and nickel at its operations in Port Colborne and Long Harbour in Canada's Ontario province.

Vale produced 2,300t of cobalt metal last year. The other two large western suppliers of cobalt metal, Sumitomo Metal Mining (SMM) in Japan and Glencore's Nikkelverk in Norway, produced 3,800t and 3,500t, respectively, comprising a combined western total of 9,600t.

"If Canadian (cobalt) now clocks a 25pc duty, that makes SMM and Nikkelverk much more valuable," a trading firm said, adding that some suppliers may have negotiated a tariff clause in contracts this year to avoid any potential impact from the US election. Annual contract negotiations for cobalt have extended longer this year because of uncertainty stemming from the US election in early November.

"[Sellers will] have an issue on their long-term contracts if they don't include a tariff clause," a market participant said.

Indonesian supply to increase

A potential source of cobalt metal that could fill the gap left by the potential absence of Canadian material is Indonesia, which until now has avoided Trump's attention.

"The 25pc duty on Canadian imports will impact Vale, basically puts them in a similar status as Chinese, so [we] could see a dramatic drop in imports," a trading firm said. "Normally, this would tighten the market further, but I think this will be easily compensated by the influx of Indonesian metal that will hit the US market."

Many ASEAN countries, including Indonesia, have a delicate balancing act to play with Trump. They must navigate between maintaining their relationship with their largest trading partner — in most cases China — and benefiting from US-based global corporations' moves to diversify supply chains away from China.

Nowhere is Indonesia's unsteady equilibrium clearer than in the battery market, where several nickel projects, a few which also produce cobalt, are in development thanks to investments from both Chinese and western companies.

Some of this cobalt is heading to the US, and several trading companies are confirmed by Argus to have Indonesian material on the water. The new supplies, produced by PT Lygend in Indonesia, are shipped to a warehouse in Ningbo, China, then packaged and sent onwards to the US. Across August and September, Indonesia exported 180t of cobalt metal to China, much of which was shipped to the US.

Cut cathodes and that with quality similar to Chinese brands recently have sold on the international market at either side of $10/lb. Similar prices could see Indonesian cobalt compete with existing brands in the US, but it will take "up to two years" to become qualified for use in aerospace applications, a trading source said.

Indonesia's trade with the US last year amounted to $23bn, making it the country's second-largest trading partner after China at $65bn. Indonesia's trade with China has grown at a compound annual growth rate of 20pc over the past 10 years, while trade with the US grew at 4.59pc.

Indonesia's combined trade with the rest of the world climbed by 7pc over the same period, data show. US investments in Indonesia totalled $67bn from 2014-23, according to a report by the US Chamber of Commerce.

"Jakarta's view will continue to be how to extract the most out of both powers and engage more partners for Indonesia's own interest," said research group ASEAN Wonk Global chief executive and founder Prashanth Parameswaran in a recent report for US congressional think-tank the Wilson Center.

Trump has clearly indicated a desire to impose tariffs on imports from much of the world, hoping to isolate countries and renegotiate trade deals on terms that are favourable to the US. There is a risk that Indonesia may end up on this list, as fellow ASEAN country Vietnam discovered in 2019, when Trump labelled it the "worst abuser" of US trade policy. But at this point, there is no clear indication either way, and cobalt trading companies are looking to use this opportunity while it lasts.

Indonesian foreign trade

Cobalt metal suppliers t

Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News
25/03/25

US consumer expectations at 12-year low: Survey

US consumer expectations at 12-year low: Survey

Houston, 25 March (Argus) — The Conference Board's preliminary Consumer Expectations Index fell in March to its lowest in 12 years, to below a threshold that "usually signals" a recession ahead. The Expectations Index, based on the short-term outlook for income, business and labor-market conditions in the US, dropped 9.6 points to 65.2, the lowest level in 12 years and "well below the threshold of 80 that usually signals a recession ahead," according to the survey. The headline Consumer Confidence index fell by 7.2 points to 92.9 in March, marking a fourth month of declines. The Present Situation Index, reflecting consumer assessments of current business and labor-market conditions, fell by 3.6 points to 134.5. The survey cutoff date for preliminary results was 19 March. US consumers' expectations were "especially gloomy, with pessimism about future business conditions deepening and confidence about future employment prospects falling to a 12-year low," according to the report. Average 12-month inflation expectations rose to 6.2pc in March from 5.8pc in February "... as consumers remained concerned about high prices for key household staples like eggs and the impact of tariffs." "Comments on the current (US) administration and its policies, both positive and negative, dominated consumers' write-in responses," the report said. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Find out more
News

Hyundai Steel to build EAF mill in Louisiana


24/03/25
News
24/03/25

Hyundai Steel to build EAF mill in Louisiana

Houston, 24 March (Argus) — South Korean automaker Hyundai Motor Group said today it plans to build an electric arc furnace (EAF) flat steel mill near New Orleans, Louisiana, to support its US auto manufacturing plants. The 2.7mn metric tonnes (t)/yr (3mn short tons/yr) mill in Donaldsonville, Louisiana, will primarily supply Hyundai's automotive plants, which are located in Alabama and Georgia, along with plants run by Hyundai-subsidiary Kia and other US automakers, according to the Louisiana Economic Development organization. Construction is expected to begin in the third quarter of 2026. Hyundai detailed the $5.8bn investment on Monday at a news conference with US president Donald Trump. Trump said the mill would allow Hyundai to avoid US steel tariffs. The president has enacted 25pc steel tariffs on imports from all countries, including from South Korea where Hyundai has all of its 24mn metric tonnes (t) of steel output capacity. That production is split evenly between blast furnace and EAF steelmaking processes. Between Hyundai and Kia, the companies have a combined annual production rate of 1.05mn vehicles/yr in the US. Hyundai Steel, a unit of Hyundai Motor, plans to import an estimated 3.6mn t/yr of iron ore to the mill, and will build a deep-water dock on the west bank of the Mississippi River in Ascension Parish to accommodate steel and materials shipments, according to LED. It was not clear whether the iron ore will be reduced in a direct reduced iron (DRI) or hot-briquetted iron (HBI) process to use in the EAF steelmaking. If built, the mill would be the first flat steel mill in Louisiana. The location in Donaldsville is about 48 miles west of New Orleans. Steelmakers operate eight EAF and re-rolling flat-rolled steel mills in the southern US with a combined 23.8mn t/yr of production capacity. By Rye Druzchetta Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Mineral Resources reopens Australian iron ore haul road


24/03/25
News
24/03/25

Mineral Resources reopens Australian iron ore haul road

Sydney, 24 March (Argus) — Australian iron ore producer Mineral Resources (MinRes) reopened its private Onslow haul road late on 21 March, following conversations with Western Australia's (WA) safety regulator Worksafe WA. The company had closed the 150km highway, which links its Onslow iron ore project to the Port of Ashburton, on 19 March. Two ore-filled road train trailers heading towards the port tipped over on 17 March, prompting Worksafe WA to issue MinRes a notice about safety risks along the road. The Onslow haul road has faced significant challenges over recent months. Cyclone Sean hit WA in late January and damaged it, after four road trains moving ore along the highway toppled over between August-November 2024. But MinRes is taking steps to improve its private road. The company in January announced plans to look at a possible redesign of the highway in January, and on 24 March announced it will finish upgrading parts of it by September. MinRes is planning to ramp up production at Onslow to 35mn t/yr during the July-September quarter, having expanded the site's export capacity from 21mn t/yr to 28mn t/yr on 22 March. The company also chose to leave its full-year Onslow export guidance unchanged at 8.8mn-9.3mn wet metric tonnes (wmt) of ore on 24 March. MinRes produced 58.4pc Fe grade iron ore at Onslow over July-December 2024. Argus ' prices for iron ore fines 58pc Fe cfr Qingdao have been volatile over the last three months, rising from $88/t on 23 December to $94.70/t on 21 February, before falling back down to $85.70/t on 21 March, when it was last assessed. By Avinash Govind Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Australia's Simcoa may buy carbon credits until 2028


21/03/25
News
21/03/25

Australia's Simcoa may buy carbon credits until 2028

Sydney, 21 March (Argus) — Australia's silicon producer Simcoa will likely need to buy and surrender Australian Carbon Credit Units (ACCUs) until 2028 for safeguard mechanism compliance obligations before it completes a key decarbonisation project, it told Argus today. The project was awarded federal funds on 20 March. Australia's federal Labor government granted Simcoa A$39.8mn ($25mn) under its Powering the Regions Fund (PRF) to expand charcoal production at its Wellesley facility in Western Australia (WA) and remove the use of coal in silicon production. The project is expected to reduce the company's scope 1 emissions by around 90pc, or approximately 100,000 t/yr of CO2 equivalent (CO2e). Simcoa is Australia's only silicon manufacturer, which is a key component of solar panels. The funding will help maintain silicon manufacturing capability in the country in addition to cutting emissions, energy minister Chris Bowen said. The company currently uses 35,000 t/yr of metallurgical low ash coal in its operations, and anticipates usage will drop to zero after it doubles its charcoal production capacity by 25,000 t/yr to 50,000 t/yr. The completion date for the expansion is not expected before 2028. The firm may continue to buy [ACCUs] as it must use coal as a reducing agent for part of its production for calendar years 2025-27, or until the expansion project can be commissioned, the company told Argus on 21 March. Simcoa surrendered 22,178 ACCUs in the July 2022-June 2023 compliance year as it reported scope 1 emissions of 122,178t of CO2e with a baseline of 100,000t CO2e at its Kemerton silicon smelter. Figures were lower for the July 2023-June 2024 compliance period, the company said, without disclosing details. Australia's Clean Energy Regulator (CER) will publish 2023-24 safeguard data by 15 April . Simcoa anticipates scope 1 emissions at the Kemerton smelter to be "considerably below" the baseline once the charcoal expansion is completed and could make it eligible to earn and sell safeguard mechanism credits (SMCs), which traded for the first time in late February . "We will take whatever opportunity is available to us," the company said on potentially holding or selling SMCs in future. By Juan Weik Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Upper Mississippi River reopens for transit


20/03/25
News
20/03/25

Upper Mississippi River reopens for transit

Houston, 20 March (Argus) — The first towboat arrived at St Paul, Minnesota, today, marking the start of the 2025 navigation season on the upper Mississippi River, according to the US Army Corps of Engineers (Corps). The Neil N. Diehl passed through Lock 2 at Hastings, Minnesota, with nine barges, crossing into St Paul on 19 March. Tows reaching St Paul signify the unofficial start of the navigation season, as St Paul is the last port to open on the Mississippi River after winter ice thaws each year. This is considered an average start time for the navigation season, which typically opens the third week of March. The first tow to reach St Paul in 2024 arrived on 17 March. The Corps released the final Lake Pepin ice measurements of 17in on 12 March and was unable to take new measurements this week since the ice had melted significantly. Lake Pepin measurements help determine when the ice will be thin enough for barges to transit up river. By Meghan Yoyotte Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more