Final Thoughts: Ferrous scrap market sees decline
Is the ferrous scrap market potentially signaling an industry recession?
Is the ferrous scrap market potentially signaling an industry recession?
US ferrous scrap prices fell steeply in March for HMS, shredded, and prime scrap, sources told SMU. “The March ferrous market was considerably softer due in general to better-than-expected inflows in February, less demand from US mills thanks to falling finished steel prices, and less demand from lackluster markets overseas,” one scrap source said. The […]
The LME 3-month price is moving higher on the morning of 12 March and was last seen trading at $2,263 /t. The LME has increased by around $30 /t since the start of the week amid a softer dollar in anticipation of US CPI inflation data later today. SHFE aluminium was broadly stable today again. […]
While the rest of the industry grapples with turmoil and plummeting prices, non-ferrous scrap spreads appear to remain unaffected, at least for the time being.
With more EV companies opening in Mexico, what could this mean for the US? And what could this do to our relationship with our largest trading partner?
In a surprising turn, a Rocky Mountain mill resumed its purchasing program at half its normal capacity, signaling potential stabilization in the Texas/Gulf region for the upcoming month.
Non-ferrous scrap spreads remained tight amid ongoing global shipping constraints, raising concerns.
While the sale of aluminum scrap is declining, there's a surge in demand from consumers.
Pittsburgh-based aluminum company Alcoa wants to acquire its Australian partner, Alumina Limited, in an all-stock deal valued at $2.2 billion.
For the West Coast export market, Tet/Chinese New Year ended on Monday and buyers were just coming back to the market.