SMM News, April 2: This week, total inventory in the two major stainless steel markets of Wuxi and Foshan posted a slight inventory buildup, rising from 982,000 mt on March 19, 2026 to 984,100 mt on April 2, 2026, up 0.21% WoW.
During the week, stainless steel futures were overall in the doldrums. Dragged down by futures moves, downstream end-users showed strong wait-and-see sentiment, and market inquiries and transactions were sluggish. Although the market was in the traditional peak consumption season, downstream just-in-time procurement was maintained, but amid disruptions from the macro environment, stainless steel prices lacked a clear direction. In the short term, transactions were heavily affected by changes in futures, and downstream end-users generally remained cautious, with little willingness to proactively stockpile, further constraining the pace of inventory digestion. Supply side, steel mills concentrated shipments to the market at month-end March, and arrivals were relatively large this week, directly driving the slight inventory buildup. Meanwhile, planned production at stainless steel mills remained generally high in April, and supply-side pressure persisted, posing a major challenge to inventory digestion. Coupled with continued macro perspective disruptions, rising market uncertainty further reinforced downstream caution, and stockpiling enthusiasm remained low throughout. Overall, this week's slight inventory buildup was mainly driven by the combined impact of concentrated steel mill shipments at month-end March, increased arrivals, weak futures, and insufficient willingness among downstream players to stockpile. At present, the high production schedule pace at steel mills has not changed significantly, and social inventory still faced substantial digestion pressure against the backdrop of high supply. Although the "Silver April" peak season provided some support to demand and just-in-time procurement kept the market basically stable, downstream caution was hard to reverse, making a sharp inventory drawdown difficult in the short term. Going forward, the key to inventory trends will still be closely tracking the release of real downstream demand, the direction of futures, and subsequent changes in the macro environment.



