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[Market Insight]: US–China Copper Scrap Trade Faces Structural Shift Amid Potential Export Restrictions
The global copper scrap market is entering a period of structural tightening as geopolitical tensions and industrial policy increasingly reshape trade flows. The relationship between the United States and China sits at the center of this transition, particularly as Washington considers restricting exports of high-quality copper scrap in 2027 while China remains heavily dependent on imported secondary copper feedstock. China’s copper scrap imports remained strong in 2024 at 441,080 MT, underscoring continued demand from secondary refiners serving the EV, renewable energy, power grid, and manufacturing sectors. However, imports have collapsed in 2025 to 143,271 MT, with current projections for 2026 falling further to just 5,305 MT. The sharp decline signals a rapid deterioration in China’s direct access to imported scrap feedstock amid rising geopolitical friction and tariffs. China’s existing 10% tariff on US-origin scrap has already reduced the competitiveness of direct shipments, although clean high-grade material has continued to move because of favorable processing economics. Trade flows indicate that copper scrap is increasingly being rerouted through Southeast Asia rather than moving directly from the United States into China. US copper scrap exports to ASEAN rose from 170,687 tonnes in 2024 to 222,993 tonnes in 2025, while Chinese imports of copper scrap from ASEAN increased from 434,176 tonnes to 529,345 tonnes over the same period. The correlation strongly suggests ASEAN is emerging as a critical intermediary hub for scrap aggregation, processing, blending, and re-export into China. This shift reflects a broader restructuring of the global scrap trade as market participants adapt to tariffs, geopolitical risk, and the growing probability of tighter controls on high-quality US scrap exports. Countries such as Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam are increasingly functioning as alternative routing channels within the global secondary copper supply chain. The timing is significant because the United States continues to export around 1 million tonnes of copper scrap globally in 2025 while domestic secondary refinery production remains limited at approximately 50kt. This imbalance is becoming central to the policy debate in Washington. As US demand for copper accelerates through grid modernization, electrification, AI-driven data center expansion, and defense manufacturing, policymakers are increasingly questioning whether high-grade recyclable copper should continue flowing overseas while the US remains dependent on imported refined copper. Current policy discussions focus on retaining a larger share of premium copper scrap within the domestic market beginning as early as 2027. Although proposals currently stop short of a full export ban, any retention mechanism would still materially reduce export availability for high-quality grades such as bare bright copper and No.1 copper scrap. For China, tighter access to premium scrap has important implications beyond the secondary market. High-quality scrap directly competes with refined copper cathode because it offers high recovery rates with lower processing intensity than primary smelting. If imported scrap availability continues to tighten, Chinese refiners will likely need to increase refined copper purchases to maintain output levels. This dynamic could become increasingly supportive for refined copper markets globally. The primary copper market is already facing structural constraints from weak mine supply growth, declining ore grades, permitting delays, and years of underinvestment in new projects. A simultaneous tightening in high-grade scrap availability would amplify pressure on refined copper balances precisely as demand linked to electrification continues to strengthen. As a result, the market could see narrower scrap discounts relative to cathode, firmer copper premiums in Asia, and increased volatility across both COMEX and LME pricing. The secondary copper market is therefore becoming an increasingly important variable in the broader refined copper outlook. Ultimately, the copper scrap market is no longer operating purely on economic arbitrage. Strategic resource security is becoming a defining driver of trade flows and policy decisions. The rapid growth in ASEAN intermediary trade, combined with collapsing direct Chinese scrap imports and growing US policy intervention, signals that the global copper supply chain is entering a new phase of fragmentation — one that is likely to tighten both scrap and refined copper markets into 2026 and beyond. Author: Shairaz Ahmed, Principal Market Analyst For more information or to discuss market dynamics, you can contact me on shairazahmed@smm.cn
May 26, 2026 17:23
[Market Insight]: US–China Copper Scrap Trade Faces Structural Shift Amid Potential Export Restrictions
[SMM Analysis] Q1 2026 Global ESS Shipments: Competitive Landscape Undergoes Fundamental Shifts
[SMM Analysis] Q1 2026 Global ESS Shipments: Competitive Landscape Undergoes Fundamental Shifts
In the first quarter of 2026, global energy storage system shipments reached 100.0 GWh, a 96.5% increase from 50.9 GWh in the same period of 2025, bringing quarterly shipments to an entirely new scale.
May 27, 2026 10:44
EU Restricts High-Risk Inverters! New Hurdles for Chinese Firms in European Solar Market!?[SMM Analysis]
In May 2026, the European Union adopted a series of restrictive measures against China in the new energy sector, several of which are directly related to the photovoltaic and energy storage supply chains. In this situation, how will the European's solar market goes...?
May 24, 2026 17:52
【SMM Analysis】Weekly Review of Indonesian Nickel Market - May 22
Nickel Ore "Indonesia Officially Issues Presidential Decree Requiring Designated State-Owned Enterprises to Monopolize Strategic Resource Exports Starting This June" 1. Price Dynamics and HMA Revisions The Indonesian nickel ore price remained stable this week. The Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources (ESDM) has officially released the Nickel Mineral Benchmark Price (HMA) for the second half of May 2026. Nickel HMA: $18,849.3/dmt (up $1047.15 or 5.88% from $17,802.14 in early May). Cobalt HMA: $55,854/dmt. Iron Ore HMA: $1.58/dmt. Chrome Ore HMA: $6.37/dmt. Current port-delivered prices for 1.6% grade pyrometallurgical ore (saprolite) stand at $77.8-80.8/wmt. In contrast, 1.2% grade hydrometallurgical ore (limonite) is priced at approximately $28-33/wm.. 2. Supply-Demand Fundamentals and Weather Impacts For pyrometallurgical ore, unseasonal, abnormally heavy rainfall in the Central and South Sulawesi regions (Morowali and surrounding mining areas) has severely disrupted land transportation and barge transshipment. A series of micro-earthquakes (reaching up to magnitude M$1.9$) that occurred near Morowali between May 17 and 18 further exacerbated this impact. The combination of highly saturated soil moisture and minor crustal tremors has significantly increased the risk of landslides and slope instability, forcing mines to slow down their extraction and heavy-truck transportation pace for safety reasons. Therefore, even though the approval rate of regulatory quotas (RKAB) has reached approximately 90%, the spot supply of high-grade ore remains tight. To cope with exorbitant costs and tight supply, smelters are actively adopting cost-reduction strategies. These include blending low-grade ores into raw materials to lower the overall grade, promoting a unified premium pricing model of "HPM + USD $7–$10/wmt," and implementing standardized benchmarks for the chemical specifications of pyrometallurgical ore (Cobalt 0.05%, Iron 20%, Chrome 1%) to eliminate additional premiums for individual ore components. Meanwhile, the hydrometallurgical nickel ore market continues to suffer a severe disconnect from official pricing. The price of low-grade hydrometallurgical ore is under severe pressure and has completely failed to follow the upward trend of the new HPM. This price depression is primarily driven by the dual contraction of smelter operating rates and immediate raw material demand, with the core trigger being a potential production cut in Mixed Hydroxide Precipitate (MHP) caused by a sulfuric acid supply shortage in May. Against a backdrop of relatively stable inventory levels, MHP refineries are leveraging this low-capacity operating environment to aggressively suppress procurement bids, causing hydrometallurgical ore prices to continue hovering at low levels. 3. SMM Internal Estimates The new pricing formula has led to increased price divergence and amplified volatility, particularly influenced by higher associated cobalt content in certain ores. SMM calculations show that the new HPM for 1.2% grade limonite is approximately $49.95, significantly higher than current market assessments. The new HPM for 1.6% grade saprolite is $70.83; the inclusion of higher cobalt content in the new formula has markedly amplified price fluctuations. While actual market transaction prices currently remain above this benchmark, the gap is steadily narrowing. 4. Regulatory Quotas (RKAB) and Market Outlook According to the ESDM, RKAB approvals for 2026 have reached approximately 90%. SMM statistics indicate that the total approved quota for Indonesian nickel ore stands at roughly 240 million wmt. The macroeconomic and policy focus of the market has recently shifted, primarily concentrating on the following two major export and contract regulatory policies: DSI's Full Takeover of the Export Mechanism: The Indonesian government has confirmed that starting January 1, 2027, DSI will fully take over the export business of coal, palm oil, and ferroalloys. This policy will facilitate a smooth transition of the export mechanism in two phases. Since ferroalloys (including ferronickel, NPI, etc.) fall within the scope of this takeover, the market is closely evaluating the impact of this transition period on the export logistics and compliance costs of Chinese-funded smelters. Crackdown on Under-Invoiced Long-Term Contracts: The Indonesian government emphasized that it will honor existing, valid long-term export contracts to maintain commercial credit. However, at the same time, the government will strictly investigate and punish long-term contracts suspected of "under-invoicing" (low-price customs declarations). It is reported that relevant Indonesian departments will soon hold consultations with major industry associations to ensure a smooth policy transition while plugging loopholes that lead to tax revenue losses from underpricing. Nickel Pig Iron "Supply-Demand Price Gap Widens; Short-Term Prices to Fluctuate within a Range" The average price of SMM 10-12% NPI average price fell by RMB 5.7 per nickel unit week-on-week to RMB 1140.3 per nickel unit (ex-works, tax included), while the Indonesia NPI FOB index dipped by USD 1.37 USD per nickel unit to an average of USD 146.52 per nickel unit. Downstream purchasing sentiment dropped even more visibly, intensifying the divide in market mindsets between buyers and sellers. On the supply side, existing NPI production cutbacks, coupled with recent disruptions from Indonesian export policy updates, have gradually tightened spot availability. Consequently, upstream producers are holding back cargo to defend their asking prices, generally keeping their offers firm. Sellers only slightly softened their quotes under the weight of weak futures markets, and their willingness to offload cargo at lower price levels remains low. This expectation of tighter market supply provides a solid floor for prices. On the demand side, pressure remains acute. The stainless steel market lacks upward momentum, forcing steel mills to adopt a highly cautious procurement stance centered strictly around hand-to-mouth restocking. Furthermore, as the price-to-performance advantage of stainless steel scrap expands, downstream buyers are pushing hard for discounts. Target buying prices remain heavily clustered between RMB 1,120 and 1,130/mtu, leaving a massive spread against upstream asking prices that makes reconciling the two sides very difficult. Market Outlook: While expectations of tightening supply will support spot prices, the weak futures market and competitive pricing from alternative raw materials will continue to cap upside gains. Accordingly, high-nickel pig iron prices are expected to exhibit a high-level, range-bound volatile trend next week.
May 22, 2026 20:42

Latest News

Baiyin Nonferrous Group to Auction 33 Tons of Crude Selenium, Bidding Starts May 26, 2026
SMM May 19 – According to official information from Baiyin Nonferrous Group Co., Ltd., the company plans to sell 33 tons of crude selenium, with pricing based on bidding for premiums or discounts against a benchmark. The floor discount is set at RMB 6,000 per ton. The auction will proceed only if at least three bidders register. Registration deadline: 17:00, May 25, 2026. Auction start time: 10:00, May 26, 2026.
May 19, 2026 17:36
Bismuth Tender Fails, No Transactions Concluded Amid Low Demand
SMM News, May 18 – According to unofficial market sources, a northern smelter recently concluded a public tender for 100 metric tons of refined bismuth from its group's holdings. Although the results were not officially announced, the tender appears to have been unsuccessful, with no transactions concluded, even under terms that allowed for partial takings.
May 18, 2026 09:59
Hunan Company Concludes Bismuth Concentrate Bidding for 2026 Delivery Above Reserve Price
Hunan Company Concludes Bismuth Concentrate Bidding for 2026 Delivery Above Reserve Price
May 15, 2026 13:54
Baiyin Nonferrous Group Launches 5 Tonnes Tellurium Ingot Tender, Bidding Starts May 19, 2026
SMM May 14 news: According to official information obtained by SMM, Baiyin Nonferrous Group Co., Ltd. will start an open tender today for its 5 tonnes of tellurium ingots. Official sources indicate that the quality of this batch meets the Te99.95 standard. The minimum tender price is set at a discount of RMB 30/kg. The stock is located at the company's warehouse. Transport costs shall be borne by the buyer. The registration deadline is before 17:00 on May 18, 2026, and the bidding will commence at 15:00 on May 19, 2026.
May 14, 2026 08:50
Shandong Humon Opens Bidding for 3,000 kg High-Purity Tellurium Residues Sale
SMM May 13 news: SMM understands that Shandong Humon has initiated an open bidding process for the sale of its high-purity tellurium residues. According to official information, the quantity is 3,000 kilograms, packaged in iron drums. The delivery term is buyer pickup, with freight borne by the buyer. The buyer is required to take delivery of the goods by May 20, 2026.
May 13, 2026 15:51
Shandong Humon Initiates Bidding for 4,000 kg High-Purity Selenium Residues Sale
SMM May 13 news: SMM understands that Shandong Humon today initiated an open bidding process for the sale of its high-purity selenium residues. This batch consists of 4,000 kilograms of high-purity selenium residues. The official announcement did not provide a starting bid price, stating instead that the material will be sold to the highest bidder. Buyers are to submit their own quotations based on their individual circumstances, with bids due by 11:30 AM on May 14, 2026.
May 13, 2026 15:45
Hunan Company Opens Bidding for 700 Tons of Bismuth Concentrate, Deadline May 13
SMM, May 12 – According to an official announcement from a Hunan-based company, bidding for the sale of 700 physical tonnes of bismuth concentrate under its May 2026 production begins today. The registration and bidding deadline is 15:30 on May 13. The final settlement quantity will be based on actual on-site weighing. This 700‑tonne batch is currently stored at the company’s warehousing centre. According to the official announcement, only one bidding session will be held for the full 700 physical tonnes, with the settlement quantity determined by actual sampling and weighing on site.
May 12, 2026 09:29
Hunan Company Sells 600 Tons of Bismuth Concentrate Above Reserve Price in April 2026 Auction
SMM, April 28 - According to market sources, a company in Hunan has started a competitive bidding process for the sale of its 600 metric tons (in physical weight) of bismuth concentrate for April 2026, with all lots successfully sold in the end. Reliable sources indicate that the final transaction price was above the reserve price of 115,000 yuan per metal metric ton. However, the seller is unwilling to disclose the exact transaction price.
Apr 28, 2026 09:05
Hunan Company Opens Bidding for 600 Tons of Bismuth Concentrate, Deadline Set for April 24
SMM April 23 News: According to an official announcement from a company in Hunan Province, bidding for the sale of 600 metric tons (in physical content) of bismuth concentrate under its production for April 2026 begins today. The deadline for registration and bid submission is 2:30 PM on April 24. The minimum bid price for this auction is set at 115,000 yuan per metal ton. Bids submitted below 115,000 yuan per metal ton will be considered invalid. Given that the bidding window is only one day long, market participants speculate that the probability of a successful transaction is relatively high.
Apr 23, 2026 11:41
Jiyuan WanYang Smelting Launches 200-Ton Bismuth Ingots Tender
SMM April 23rd News: SMM learned that Jiyuan WanYang Smelting Group Co., Ltd. has recently initiated a public tender for approximately 200 tons of bismuth ingots.
Apr 23, 2026 11:39
Baiyin Nonferrous Launches 130-Ton Crude Cadmium Bidding, Drawing Market Attention
SMM, April 20: According to SMM, Baiyin Nonferrous Group's Gansu Changba Nonferrous Metals Co., Ltd. has launched an open bidding sales for approximately 130 tons of crude cadmium. According to official sources, the bidding floor price is set at an average price of SMM's #1 Cadmium minus RMB 1,650/ton, with the highest bidder winning the lot. The bidding requires at least three registered participants to proceed as scheduled. The registration deadline is 5:00 PM on April 23, 2026, and the bidding will begin at 10:00 AM on April 24, 2026. Market participants note that as cadmium prices have remained stable recently, this tender is drawing notable attention and may offer insights into the strength of market demand.
Apr 20, 2026 17:28
Major Manufacturer's Crude Selenium Bidding Fails, Market Trend Shifts Amid Weaker Demand
SMM reported on April 20 that according to market rumors, a major northern manufacturer's public bidding for the sale of dozens of tons of crude selenium, which had recently drawn market attention, ultimately ended in failed transactions, sources said. Market participants indicate that given the bidding results for selenium, it is understandable for buyers to adopt a wait-and-see stance temporarily after crude selenium prices rose too quickly and repeatedly hit new highs in the recent period.
Apr 20, 2026 17:13
Jiyuan Wanyang Smelting Launches 15 Tonne Tellurium Ingot Tender, Bidding Closes April 17, 2026
SMM April 14 news: As learned by SMM, Jiyuan Wanyang Smelting Group Co., Ltd. will begin a public tender for its 15 tonnes of tellurium ingots today. The bidding document collection period for this tellurium ingot tender is April 14, 2026. The bidding period runs from April 14, 2026, until 10:00 on April 17, 2026. The bid opening time for this tellurium ingot tender is set at 10:00 on April 17, 2026.
Apr 14, 2026 11:05
Baiyin Nonferrous to Auction 33 Tons of Crude Selenium, Bidding Starts April 16, 2026
SMM, April 13 - According to official information from Baiyin Nonferrous Group Co., the company plans to sell 33 tons of crude selenium, with the pricing based on a bidding process for premiums and discounts. The base discount is set at 4,000 yuan per ton. The auction will proceed only if at least three bidders register. The registration deadline is 5:00 PM on April 15, 2026. The bidding will commence at 3:00 PM on April 16, 2026. Given the strong transaction prices recently seen in crude selenium tenders, market participants expect promising results from this premium-based auction.
Apr 13, 2026 15:58
[Market Insight]: US–China Copper Scrap Trade Faces Structural Shift Amid Potential Export Restrictions
[Market Insight]: US–China Copper Scrap Trade Faces Structural Shift Amid Potential Export Restrictions
The global copper scrap market is entering a period of structural tightening as geopolitical tensions and industrial policy increasingly reshape trade flows. The relationship between the United States and China sits at the center of this transition, particularly as Washington considers restricting exports of high-quality copper scrap in 2027 while China remains heavily dependent on imported secondary copper feedstock. China’s copper scrap imports remained strong in 2024 at 441,080 MT, underscoring continued demand from secondary refiners serving the EV, renewable energy, power grid, and manufacturing sectors. However, imports have collapsed in 2025 to 143,271 MT, with current projections for 2026 falling further to just 5,305 MT. The sharp decline signals a rapid deterioration in China’s direct access to imported scrap feedstock amid rising geopolitical friction and tariffs. China’s existing 10% tariff on US-origin scrap has already reduced the competitiveness of direct shipments, although clean high-grade material has continued to move because of favorable processing economics. Trade flows indicate that copper scrap is increasingly being rerouted through Southeast Asia rather than moving directly from the United States into China. US copper scrap exports to ASEAN rose from 170,687 tonnes in 2024 to 222,993 tonnes in 2025, while Chinese imports of copper scrap from ASEAN increased from 434,176 tonnes to 529,345 tonnes over the same period. The correlation strongly suggests ASEAN is emerging as a critical intermediary hub for scrap aggregation, processing, blending, and re-export into China. This shift reflects a broader restructuring of the global scrap trade as market participants adapt to tariffs, geopolitical risk, and the growing probability of tighter controls on high-quality US scrap exports. Countries such as Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam are increasingly functioning as alternative routing channels within the global secondary copper supply chain. The timing is significant because the United States continues to export around 1 million tonnes of copper scrap globally in 2025 while domestic secondary refinery production remains limited at approximately 50kt. This imbalance is becoming central to the policy debate in Washington. As US demand for copper accelerates through grid modernization, electrification, AI-driven data center expansion, and defense manufacturing, policymakers are increasingly questioning whether high-grade recyclable copper should continue flowing overseas while the US remains dependent on imported refined copper. Current policy discussions focus on retaining a larger share of premium copper scrap within the domestic market beginning as early as 2027. Although proposals currently stop short of a full export ban, any retention mechanism would still materially reduce export availability for high-quality grades such as bare bright copper and No.1 copper scrap. For China, tighter access to premium scrap has important implications beyond the secondary market. High-quality scrap directly competes with refined copper cathode because it offers high recovery rates with lower processing intensity than primary smelting. If imported scrap availability continues to tighten, Chinese refiners will likely need to increase refined copper purchases to maintain output levels. This dynamic could become increasingly supportive for refined copper markets globally. The primary copper market is already facing structural constraints from weak mine supply growth, declining ore grades, permitting delays, and years of underinvestment in new projects. A simultaneous tightening in high-grade scrap availability would amplify pressure on refined copper balances precisely as demand linked to electrification continues to strengthen. As a result, the market could see narrower scrap discounts relative to cathode, firmer copper premiums in Asia, and increased volatility across both COMEX and LME pricing. The secondary copper market is therefore becoming an increasingly important variable in the broader refined copper outlook. Ultimately, the copper scrap market is no longer operating purely on economic arbitrage. Strategic resource security is becoming a defining driver of trade flows and policy decisions. The rapid growth in ASEAN intermediary trade, combined with collapsing direct Chinese scrap imports and growing US policy intervention, signals that the global copper supply chain is entering a new phase of fragmentation — one that is likely to tighten both scrap and refined copper markets into 2026 and beyond. Author: Shairaz Ahmed, Principal Market Analyst For more information or to discuss market dynamics, you can contact me on shairazahmed@smm.cn
May 26, 2026 17:23
Has Indonesia Learned Its Nickel Lesson? Its Bauxite Market Will Tell
Has Indonesia Learned Its Nickel Lesson? Its Bauxite Market Will Tell
May 22, 2026 19:02
[SMM Analysis] Core Drivers & Long-term Outlook of China's Tungsten Market
[SMM Analysis] Core Drivers & Long-term Outlook of China's Tungsten Market
May 22, 2026 13:32
Chinese firms dominate Guinea alumina expansion, potentially shifting the country from bauxite exporter into alumina hub
Chinese firms dominate Guinea alumina expansion, potentially shifting the country from bauxite exporter into alumina hub
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[SMM Analysis] Q1 2026 Global ESS Shipments: Competitive Landscape Undergoes Fundamental Shifts
[SMM Analysis] Q1 2026 Global ESS Shipments: Competitive Landscape Undergoes Fundamental Shifts
May 27, 2026 10:44
EU Restricts High-Risk Inverters! New Hurdles for Chinese Firms in European Solar Market!?[SMM Analysis]
EU Restricts High-Risk Inverters! New Hurdles for Chinese Firms in European Solar Market!?[SMM Analysis]
May 24, 2026 17:52
【SMM Analysis】Weekly Review of Indonesian Nickel Market - May 22
【SMM Analysis】Weekly Review of Indonesian Nickel Market - May 22
May 22, 2026 20:42
Latest News
Northern Refinery's Crude Selenium Tender Fails to Attract Bidders, Market Remains Steady
May 25, 2026 10:05
China's Bismuth Trioxide Exports Drop Below 1,000 Tons in April 2026
May 20, 2026 13:22
China's Bismuth Trioxide Exports Dip in April but Outlook Remains Positive
May 20, 2026 13:21
Baiyin Nonferrous Group to Auction 33 Tons of Crude Selenium, Bidding Starts May 26, 2026
May 19, 2026 17:36
Bismuth Tender Fails, No Transactions Concluded Amid Low Demand
May 18, 2026 09:59
Hunan Company Concludes Bismuth Concentrate Bidding for 2026 Delivery Above Reserve Price
May 15, 2026 13:54
Baiyin Nonferrous Group Launches 5 Tonnes Tellurium Ingot Tender, Bidding Starts May 19, 2026
May 14, 2026 08:50
Shandong Humon Opens Bidding for 3,000 kg High-Purity Tellurium Residues Sale
May 13, 2026 15:51
Shandong Humon Initiates Bidding for 4,000 kg High-Purity Selenium Residues Sale
May 13, 2026 15:45
Hunan Company Opens Bidding for 700 Tons of Bismuth Concentrate, Deadline May 13
May 12, 2026 09:29
Baiyin Nonferrous Plans to Sell 33 Tonnes of Crude Selenium via Competitive Bidding in May 2026
May 12, 2026 09:12
China's Refined Bismuth Output to See Modest Growth in April 2026
May 9, 2026 09:59
China's Bismuth Trioxide Exports Surge in March 2026, Showing Steady Growth Trend
Apr 29, 2026 14:13
Hunan Company Sells 600 Tons of Bismuth Concentrate Above Reserve Price in April 2026 Auction
Apr 28, 2026 09:05
Hunan Company Opens Bidding for 600 Tons of Bismuth Concentrate, Deadline Set for April 24
Apr 23, 2026 11:41
Jiyuan WanYang Smelting Launches 200-Ton Bismuth Ingots Tender
Apr 23, 2026 11:39
Baiyin Nonferrous Launches 130-Ton Crude Cadmium Bidding, Drawing Market Attention
Apr 20, 2026 17:28
Major Manufacturer's Crude Selenium Bidding Fails, Market Trend Shifts Amid Weaker Demand
Apr 20, 2026 17:13
Jiyuan Wanyang Smelting Launches 15 Tonne Tellurium Ingot Tender, Bidding Closes April 17, 2026
Apr 14, 2026 11:05
Baiyin Nonferrous to Auction 33 Tons of Crude Selenium, Bidding Starts April 16, 2026
Apr 13, 2026 15:58