On Sept. 16, 2025, a fire at Novelis's aluminum rolling mill in Oswego, New York disrupted roughly 40 percent of the automotive aluminum sheet used in North America. The importance of this supply disruption can be determined using standard stock market event study analyses. Ford was one of the firms most exposed to the disruption because it relied heavily on automotive aluminum sheet. As analysts began estimating the impact on vehicle production and profitability, Ford's stock price fell sharply. Similarly, investors also penalized Hindalco, Novelis's parent company. The interesting question is what happened to competitors. If one supplier exits temporarily, shouldn't rivals benefit?
|
Firm |
Relationship to Event |
Approximate Stock Market Reaction |
|
Ford |
Customer of automotive aluminum sheet |
-7% abnormal return |
|
Hindalco (owner of Novelis) |
Directly affected supplier |
-6% abnormal return |
|
Kaiser Aluminum |
Potential substitute supplier |
+3% to +5% short-term gain |
|
Constellium |
Potential substitute supplier |
Little measurable effect |
Investors appeared to believe that Ford would suffer large costs from the disruption, but they did not assign equally large gains to Novelis's competitors. While aluminum itself is a commodity, automotive aluminum sheet is not. Suppliers must invest in specialized equipment, satisfy demanding quality standards, and undergo lengthy qualification processes with automakers. Even if competitors wanted to absorb Novelis's lost volume, they may not have had sufficient spare capacity or approved production lines to do so quickly. Ford's stock market loss was several times larger than analysts' estimates of immediate production costs because investors recognized that replacing a critical supplier is expensive and time-consuming. There are no doubt benefits to Ford and Novelis from contract exclusivity. This episode highlights the costs.
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