The High Court in London ruled in favour of Rusal (>> United Company Rusal Plc) which fears prices of its products will suffer from the LME's efforts, which had been due to take effect on April 1, to make owners of warehouses in the exchange's global network deliver metal more quickly to consumers.

"The LME is disappointed with the outcome of the judicial review," said the exchange, the world's biggest marketplace for industrial metals, adding the new rule would not be implemented as scheduled.

It said it was taking legal advice on its options, including launching an appeal or restarting the consultation.

The LME oversees warehouses where companies that buy metals such as aluminium or copper on its futures market can take delivery of quality-assured supplies if needed.

Big banks and traders that own warehouses and charge rent have profited from letting long queues build up for buyers to withdraw metal. Some also keep huge stocks of aluminium tied up, unavailable to manufacturers, in long-term financing deals.

In a bid to appease critics of this situation, which keeps the cost of obtaining physical metal high even though the world is awash with aluminium, the LME moved last year to implement a package of reforms including a cut in the maximum queues.

It was the consultation with stakeholders on this "load-in load-out" rule that the court quashed.

"HUGE MESS"

Industry sources and analysts were shocked at the decision.

"This is a huge mess. This was supposed to be the LME cleaning up its act as far as the enormous queues were concerned with aluminium, which have fundamentally undermined the efficiency of the aluminium market," said Nic Brown, head of commodity research at French bank Natixis.

"I'm slightly stunned and very much surprised that the new delivery out rules are no longer being implemented in April."

Buyers of aluminium, such as soft drinks cans makers, have long complained about queues of over a year to release metal from storage at key locations including Detroit in the United States and Vlissingen in the Netherlands.

But producers worried that a glut of metal, which could be released from warehouses, would hit already weak prices.

The LME, owned by Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing (>> Hong Kong Exchanges and Clearing Limited), had voiced "serious concerns" in court last month over its ability to maintain an orderly base metal market if forced to repeat the consultation.

It said on Thursday that other reforms would go ahead, including a logistical review, a new physical markets committee and new position data.

The package agreed last year beefed up the exchange's powers to act against market abuse and involved a review of its agreement with warehouse owners.

The court found in the LME's favour on other issues.

"It should be noted that the court made no adverse comments on the substantive merits of the proposed changes to LME's warehousing policy," the LME said.

The judgment said the LME's consultation on its new regulations should have included an option to ban or cap the payment of rentals for metal stuck in queues.

"In summary, I have found the LME's consultation to have been unfair and unlawful... and quash the LME's decision to implement the rule," the judge's decision said.

Rusal, the world's largest producer of aluminium, sought court permission last month for the review on grounds including human rights - the right to peaceful enjoyment of its possessions.

"We welcome this decision by the High Court and look forward to working closely with the LME, and indeed all key stakeholders," Rusal's Chief Executive Oleg Deripaska said.

Rusal said the LME would now be required to carry out a fair and lawful consultation process.

Benchmark LME aluminium prices have shed about 40 percent since touching a peak around $2,800 (£1,682) a tonne in May 2011.

Recently, they have been under $1,800 (£1,081) per tonne, close to or below break-even for a big portion of global capacity.

(Additional reporting by Polina Devitt in Moscow; Editing by Anthony Barker)

By Eric Onstad and Veronica Brown