The Trump administration’s condemnation of cheap Chinese aluminium is helping resolve overcapacity in China even before any measures are implemented, according to the top US producer.
The US Commerce Department is preparing to deliver its Section 232 report on national-security threats posed by aluminium imports. Before any measures are announced, debate surrounding the investigation has helped shine a light on the real issue of Chinese smelting overcapacity, and that’s helping convince China to take further action, Alcoa Corp chief executive officer Roy Harvey said. Global aluminium prices have surged as a result.
Harvey expects China to continue shuttering smelters as part of a broader pollution-fighting initiative. Any remedies levied in a 232 case should address Chinese overcapacity, he said in an interview.
“We’re waiting to see what exactly the 232 report holds as well, but we’ve been trying to make clear: let’s understand what the problem is and let’s understand how we’re trying to address it,” he said from Alcoa’s headquarters in Pittsburgh.
The Trump administration launched the investigation – under the seldom-used section of the Trade Expansion Act – in April and is due to deliver results this month. The president then has 90 days to determine whether he wants to take action, which could be in the form of tariffs, quotas or a mix of both.
The 232 study follows a World Trade Organisation complaint filed in the last days of the Obama administration alleging subsidies to Chinese producers that suppressed global prices. Aluminium has surged since then.
In an earnings presentation on Wednesday, Alcoa said it projects the glut of Chinese aluminium to ebb in 2018 to about 1.5mn to 1.7mn metric tonnes, down from the company’s 2017 forecast of 1.8mn to 2mn tonnes.
Harvey said Alcoa’s strategy and market analysis team determined that Chinese reductions through pollution curbs and winter seasonal cuts are real and continuing, based on its study of the markets both inside and outside the Asian nation.
“We bring all of that into our proprietary view,” Harvey said. “So we base our understanding of 2018 on what they’ve just recently announced,” but “we base all of our conclusions off what we believe and understand on history and what’s happening more recently.”
Asked if he has a preference for 232 measures or the WTO case, Harvey said the latter may not be enough on its own.
“The difficulty with a WTO tool is that it takes a long time to happen,” he said. “I have to believe a lot of these discussions have led the Chinese government to see this is a real problem, and a real problem of overcapacity that needs to be fixed.”
Alcoa reported fourth-quarter earnings this week that surprised investors as costs rose, reducing expectations for 2018 guidance.
The company announced it would make discretionary contributions into its pension plans, beyond required contributions, of about $300mn. That may reduce the amount of cash available for share buybacks, dividends or special dividends, which chief financial officer Bill Oplinger said will likely come in the second half of the year.
In the interview, Harvey and Oplinger expanded on what Alcoa expects to do with its cash. The company doesn’t have to consider acquisitions because it’s in the “right spot” to grow organically, Harvey said.
Whatever cash remains after keeping $1bn on hand, sustaining operations, setting aside $150mn for “high-returning projects” and dealing with discretionary contribution pension plans, the company will split between giving back to shareholders and further deleveraging, Oplinger said.
“That’s the framework we’ll follow through 2018,” he said. “We’ll relook at it as we go into 2019, and the reason why we take it one year at a time is because we’re a commodity company.”


A Chinese worker checks aluminium tapes at a plant in Huaibei. In an earnings presentation on Wednesday, Alcoa said it projects the glut of Chinese aluminium to ebb in 2018 to about 1.5mn to 1.7mn metric tonnes, down from the company’s 2017 forecast of 1.8mn to 2mn tonnes.

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