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[SMM Market Insight] Copper at $13,000/t in a Surplus Market — What’s Going On?
This insight follows panel discussions at SMM’s London H1 2026 seminar, where one theme stood out clearly: funds are trumping fundamentals in today’s copper market. At first glance, the setup looks contradictory. There is no clear physical shortage of copper: near-term time spreads are in contango, signalling adequate supply; SMM forecasts a small global refined surplus in 2026; global exchange stocks are rising. On traditional metrics, prices should be softer. Yet LME copper remains elevated at around $13,000/t. This leads us to believe that copper is no longer trading purely on market fundamentals. So What Is Driving Copper Higher? Financial flows dominate price formation Speculative inflows since the middle of last year have played a key role in pushing copper higher. The recent rally following the initial shock of the US-Iran war is no exception. While some capital has rotated into energy markets recently, inflows into copper and broader commodities have remained resilient, supported by macro funds and systematic positioning. Momentum-driven strategies (CTAs, macro funds) have reinforced upside moves, especially during periods of positive price signals and cross-asset risk appetite. This can be seen from the bottom right hand-side chart which shows speculative positions from the LME’s Commitment of Traders Report (COTR). There has also been selective physical support, particularly from China, where downstream buying and restocking have contributed to declining local inventories at times. However, this physical demand has been opportunistic rather than structural, and insufficient on its own to explain the persistence of elevated prices. Overall, barring the initial geopolitical shock, copper price strength has been largely investor-led rather than consumer-led, with financial capital remaining the dominant marginal driver of price formation. A persistent geopolitical premium Supply risks remain elevated across key producing regions; energy and input cost volatility (e.g. sulphuric acid and diesel) adds uncertainty to production; trade fragmentation and resource nationalism are reshaping supply chains; copper is increasingly priced as a strategic resource, not just a commodity. Policy distortions — particularly from the US Tariff expectations and US government policy aimed at securing domestic supply chains — including potential import tariffs on copper, incentives for local processing, and broader reshoring of manufacturing — have triggered regional stockpiling. This has tightened availability ex-US and distorted global trade flows, as material is increasingly drawn into the US market. In effect, policy is creating artificial tightness in specific regions, even as the global market remains broadly balanced. Structural narrative outweighs current balance Electrification, grid expansion, and AI infrastructure continue to anchor long-term demand; supply constraints (declining ore grades, permitting delays) remain unresolved. As such, the market is pricing future deficits today, not current surplus. Why Surplus Does Not Equal Lower Prices The key misunderstanding in today’s market is treating copper like a static balance sheet. The surplus is marginal and unevenly distributed. Inventories are not necessarily located where demand is strongest. The market reacts to marginal tightness and risk, not annual average. Most importantly, copper is a forward-looking asset — it prices sentiment and expectations, not just spot fundamentals. How Traders Think About Copper Now Copper price formation has evolved into a multi‑layered system according to our panellists: Price = Fundamentals + Financial Flows + Macro + Narrative By this, we mean that copper prices are driven by four interacting components — Fundamentals, Financial Flows, Macro, and Narrative — and traders now analyse each layer in more depth to anticipate price direction. They: Watch financial conditions — positioning, flows, momentum, correlations Traders look at who holds risk, how strong the flows are, and whether momentum is building or fading. Cross‑asset signals — especially from US equities and major commodity indices — show whether copper is trading as part of a broader risk‑on move or reacting to something more specific. Track macro drivers — interest rates, policy, USD, liquidity Copper reacts quickly to shifts in US real yields, Fed expectations, and the strength of the dollar. Easier financial conditions or a weaker USD can lift prices even when demand is soft. Global liquidity trends, including China’s credit cycle, influence how much speculative capital enters the market. Monitor policy and geopolitics — tariffs, sanctions, trade flows, disruptions Policy decisions now move copper as much as fundamentals. Tariffs, sanctions, and export controls reshape trade flows and create regional imbalances. Geopolitical tensions and supply disruptions — from strikes to permitting delays — reinforce the market’s focus on future scarcity. Stay grounded in physical stress points — inventories, premiums, scrap Headline stocks matter less than where the metal sits. Traders watch regional inventory tightness, premiums, treatment charges, and scrap availability to understand real physical stress. These signals reveal whether the market is genuinely tight or simply trading a narrative. The consensus is that as long as capital flows remain strong, geopolitical risks persist, and the market prices future scarcity, copper can stay elevated — even in surplus. Where Next for Copper? As for immediate near-term dynamics, the copper market is treading water, increasingly driven by headline risk. Recent price action has been closely tied to developments around the Iran crisis, highlighting just how far copper has shifted into the macro arena. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz presents a two-sided risk for copper: On the bullish side , the Gulf is a major exporter of sulphur, a critical input for sulphuric acid used in leaching processes. With solvent extraction and electrowinning accounting for roughly a quarter of global refined output, continued disruptions to acid supply could tighten production, particularly in the DRC, and support prices. On the bearish side , higher energy prices risk triggering a broader slowdown in global manufacturing, weakening copper demand. The longer the disruptions persist, the greater the downside risk to consumption. With investors firmly in control of price formation, copper has effectively become part of a multi-asset macro trade on the trajectory of the Iran conflict. In this environment, both bulls and bears are less anchored to supply-demand balances and more dependent on the next geopolitical headline. Author: Shairaz Ahmed, Principal Market Analyst For more information or to discuss market dynamics, you can contact me on shairazahmed@smm.cn
May 6, 2026 00:08
[SMM Market Insight] Copper at $13,000/t in a Surplus Market — What’s Going On?
Copper Prices and Premiums Fluctuate Amid Supply and Demand Shifts in Q1 2026
Copper Prices and Premiums Fluctuate Amid Supply and Demand Shifts in Q1 2026
High copper prices, ample supply, weak demand, inventory buildup, weak structure ↓ Falling copper prices, still ample supply, good demand, destocking, slightly stronger structure ↓ Fluctuating copper prices, relatively tight supply, demand fluctuating with copper prices, high probability of destocking, high probability of strengthening structure Q1 2026 has ended, and April trading days are also about to end. The above two sentences summarize SHFE copper futures and spot market performance. Note that this refers only to copper cathode supply, as China saw significant production increases in 2025. Despite continued ore tightness, production in 2026 has also remained fluctuating at highs, keeping copper cathode supply persistently ample. Demand side, although annual demand showed growth, when broken down to monthly or even daily levels, demand was significantly influenced by copper prices. Amid copper price fluctuations, secondary copper was the "active player" — when copper prices were high, secondary copper shipments increased, benefiting both supply and demand sides; when copper prices fell, secondary copper shipments decreased, reducing some raw material supply for both supply and demand. So recently the spot market appeared to have tight supply. Smelters began shifting to "high prices with high volumes" in shipments. Against the backdrop of continued destocking and concentrated smelter maintenance, can premiums "heat up"? The chart above shows that from a macro perspective, copper prices and Shanghai spot copper premiums exhibited a clear inverse correlation in recent years. However, from a detailed perspective, Shanghai spot copper premiums have recently shown signs of "picking up" under high copper prices. 1. Although inventory continued destocking, the current warrant-to-inventory ratio remained elevated (this indicator is highly correlated with structure). The SHFE copper near-month structure has not shown a sustained backwardation structure to provide guidance for future premiums. 2. Although copper prices returned to highs, overall secondary copper shipment sentiment remained subdued, providing limited supplementation to copper cathode production and consumption. Previously, the price difference between primary metal and scrap was inverted, which favored copper cathode consumption. During this process, non-registered supply supplementation was limited, and the price spread between non-registered and SX-EW copper also narrowed. Imported copper supplementation within the year decreased YoY compared to previous years. Taking DRC as an example, non-registered supply was also diverted. Overall, substitutes for registered copper cathode decreased. 3. Copper cathode supply itself is about to decrease in the coming months, with concentrated maintenance currently underway in the market. Social inventory is expected to further decline. As inventory decreases and the warrant-to-inventory ratio declines, the far-month structure has already shifted to backwardation. China's spot premiums are also expected to pick up in the near term. It has been observed that Guangdong spot premiums have been consistently higher than other regions nationwide for several consecutive days. Downstream buyers in Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Shanghai, and Anhui have recently tended to purchase from direct producers and traders with inventory who can issue invoices for the current month. Shanghai spot copper premiums are expected to see a small spike before the Labour Day holiday. After the holiday, as domestic supply decreases, premiums are expected to gradually firm up. However, the warrant-to-inventory ratio remains relatively high, and a sustained shift to backwardation in the structure still requires patience.
Apr 30, 2026 18:07
Global Aluminum Market Review – April: Divergent Domestic & Overseas Trends and Marked Spot Structure Disparities
Global Aluminum Market Review – April: Divergent Domestic & Overseas Trends and Marked Spot Structure Disparities
Global Aluminum Market Review – April: Divergent Domestic & Overseas Trends and Marked Spot Structure Disparities The global aluminum market in April featured a core pattern of strength overseas and weakness domestically with diverging trends. The main Shanghai aluminum contract retreated from highs amid fluctuations, while LME aluminum maintained firm momentum supported by low inventories and geopolitical factors, with both markets seeing mild corrections toward month-end. Market drivers this month centered on macro policies, geopolitical conflicts, supply-demand fundamentals and inventory structures, with movements of key indicators further highlighting supply-demand imbalances between domestic and overseas aluminum markets. I. April Aluminum Price Review: Linked Movements with Distinct Strength Differentials Shanghai aluminum and LME aluminum shared similar price rhythms in April, both fluctuating higher initially before retreating. However, notable gaps emerged in upward momentum and correction ranges, with overseas aluminum prices significantly outperforming domestic counterparts. The average Shanghai-LME aluminum ratio dropped from 7.36 in March to 7.03 in April, reflecting stronger overseas aluminum pricing relative to Shanghai aluminum. The main Shanghai aluminum contract trended upward early in the month before softening overall, declining from elevated levels through range-bound trading. It opened lower at RMB 24,715 per ton at the start of the month and consolidated. Driven by escalating Middle East geopolitical tensions and rising LME aluminum prices, it surged to a monthly peak of RMB 25,675 per ton in mid-April. In late April, amid continuous domestic inventory accumulation, weaker-than-expected downstream demand, and risk-averse capital outflows ahead of the May Day holiday, prices corrected steadily. Closing at RMB 24,430 per ton on April 30, the contract recorded a monthly trading range of nearly RMB 1,360 per ton. LME March aluminum traded firmly with mild late-month declines. Opening at USD 3,459 per ton, it climbed to a monthly high of USD 3,672 per ton in mid-April, underpinned by overseas supply disruptions from geopolitical frictions and sustained inventory destocking. Prices edged down later due to fluctuating US-Iran negotiations, hawkish macro sentiment and profit-taking at high levels, settling at USD 3,476 per ton at month-end with a slight monthly loss. Overall, LME aluminum vastly outperformed domestic Shanghai aluminum. In terms of price drivers, geopolitics served as a shared upward catalyst for global aluminum prices, with production cuts and supply disruptions in the Middle East continuously boosting market risk aversion. Price divergence stemmed from dual disparities in macro policies and fundamentals: elevated domestic inventories and sluggish demand consistently capped aluminum price rebounds, while tight overseas inventories and strained spot supplies provided robust support for LME aluminum. II. Key Inventory Indicators: Divergent Inventory Movements and Contrasting Supply-Demand Landscapes As a core gauge of aluminum market supply and demand, domestic and overseas inventory trends diverged sharply in April, directly shaping the relative strength of regional aluminum prices. Domestic aluminum inventories kept rising and stood at a multi-year seasonal high. Social inventories maintained an upward trend throughout April, hitting 1.465 million tons in mid-month, the highest seasonal level in five years. A clear imbalance emerged between rigid supply release and lackluster downstream demand during the traditional peak "Silver April" period, leading to persistent spot market loosening. SHFE warehouse stocks expanded from 420,000 tons at the start of the month to 450,000 tons at month-end. Elevated warehouse stock levels further confirmed ample domestic spot supply, weighing continuously on aluminum prices. Overseas LME aluminum inventories declined steadily to a 20-year low. Total LME aluminum inventories fell from 410,000 tons to 370,000 tons in April, extending months of destocking to historic lows. Noticeable structural divergence persisted in inventory composition: Russian aluminum accounted for approximately 92% of total LME stocks in March, resulting in low market-circulating inventories and increasingly tight physical spot supply, which acted as the fundamental pillar for strong LME aluminum prices. In summary, April’s global aluminum market was governed by contrasting core dynamics: low overseas inventories, geopolitical disruptions and hawkish Federal Reserve policies on the overseas front, versus high domestic inventories, weak real demand and stable growth expectations domestically. This drove pronounced market divergence. Affected by intertwined internal and external factors, the main Shanghai aluminum contract corrected downwards from highs, while LME aluminum remained in a firm trading range, backed by historically low inventories, a tight spot balance and geopolitical risk premiums.
Apr 30, 2026 23:43

Latest News

China's Secondary Aluminum Alloy Ingot Inventory Rises 363 MT Post-Holiday
[SMM Express] Today, the inventory of secondary aluminum alloy ingots in China's major consumption areas increased by 363 mt from the pre-holiday level (April 30) to 30,900 mt, maintaining a slight inventory buildup trend.
May 6, 2026 09:23
Ferrous Metals May Continue to Fluctuate at Highs in the Short Term [SMM Steel Industry Chain Weekly Report]
This week, ferrous metals moved sideways and upward. During the week, as US-Iran negotiations made no progress and the Strait of Hormuz remained closed, combined with declining US crude oil inventories, Brent crude oil surged sharply, driving coking coal higher. Although BHP port spot cargoes were available for purchase, which was bearish for market sentiment, futures had already priced in related expectations earlier, so iron ore pullback was limited and cost support was relatively neutral. The Politburo meeting held mid-week had low direct correlation with ferrous metals, and ferrous metals fluctuated at highs during the week. Spot market side, end-users restocked at low prices before the holiday, and as futures rose in the latter half of the week, speculative demand was also released...
Apr 30, 2026 18:20
China's Secondary Aluminum Industry Sees Operating Rates Drop Amid Slowing Orders and Early Holidays
[SMM Aluminum News] This week, the operating rate of leading enterprises in China's secondary aluminum industry edged down WoW. On one hand, amid shrinking orders, downstream enterprises generally reduced procurement volumes, maintaining a pace of just-needed, small-batch restocking. On the other hand, some enterprises halted production and went on early holidays due to insufficient orders or inventory risk control considerations, further suppressing market transaction activity and dragging down the operating rate of secondary aluminum producers. As off-season characteristics in May further intensified, if downstream resumption pace remained slow and new orders failed to follow through, the industry's operating rate would still face certain downward pressure.
Apr 30, 2026 14:47
SHFE Tin Rebounded Above 385,000 in Early Trading, Spot Market Trading Sluggish Awaiting Post-Holiday Guidance [SMM Tin Midday Review]
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Riba Farré Invites You to the SMM (3rd) Global Recycled Metals Industry Peak Forum
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China's Secondary Aluminum Alloy Ingots Inventory Rises for Third Consecutive Week Amid Weak Demand
According to SMM statistics, as of this Thursday, the social inventory of secondary aluminum alloy ingots in China's major consumption areas stood at 56,800 mt, up 7,500 mt WoW, marking three consecutive weeks of inventory buildup. Recently, end-use demand continued to weaken, with insufficient downstream purchase willingness and a notable slowdown in shipments pace, causing in-factory inventory to continuously shift to social inventory and intensifying inventory buildup pressure.
Apr 30, 2026 10:07
Rising Futures Center Suppressed Buying, Trading Cooled Today After Partial Demand Release Yesterday [SMM Tin Midday Review]
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SHFE Tin Tested the 380,000 Level, Bargain Buying Drove Spot Trades to Recover [SMM Tin Midday Review]
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Apr 28, 2026 11:54
Strong Cost Support Meets Weak Demand as Overseas Secondary Aluminum Market Divergence Widens 【SMM Analysis】
The overseas secondary aluminum market continues to exhibit structural divergence. Elevated scrap prices provide strong cost support, but cautious downstream procurement and weak transaction follow-through are dampening demand-side momentum. As a result, prices remain firm while trading activity stays subdued.【SMM Analysis】
Apr 28, 2026 09:37
China's Secondary Aluminum Alloy Ingot Inventory Rises by 531 mt to 28,400 mt, Trend Continues
[SMM Express] China's mainstream consumption areas saw secondary aluminum alloy ingot inventory increase by 531 mt from the previous day to 28,400 mt, continuing the inventory buildup trend.
Apr 28, 2026 09:20
Aluminum Alloy 2606 Rises 0.83%, Spot ADC12 Steady Amid Weak Demand Ahead of Labour Day Holiday
[SMM Aluminum Alloy Daily Review] Futures side, the aluminum alloy 2606 contract opened today at 23,390 yuan/mt, then quickly surged to an intraday high of 23,685 yuan/mt, with gains briefly approaching 0.9%. Prices then fluctuated and pulled back, last reported at 23,575 yuan/mt, up 195 yuan/mt from the previous close, a gain of 0.83%. Short-term moving averages turned upward, and the KDJ indicator formed a golden cross at low levels, indicating that short-term rebound momentum saw some recovery. Spot side, the SMM ADC12 price remained flat from the previous trading day at 24,100 yuan/mt. Cost side, aluminum price fluctuations narrowed, offering limited price support. Demand side, although the Labour Day holiday was approaching, downstream orders contracted, leading to weak stockpiling wi
Apr 27, 2026 13:30
Macro Stalemate Combined with High Price Suppression, Downstream Enterprises Show Limited Pre-Holiday Stockpiling Willingness [SMM Tin Midday Review]
[SMM Tin Midday Review: Macro Stalemate Combined with High-Price Suppression, Downstream Enterprises Show Limited Pre-Holiday Stockpiling Willingness]
Apr 27, 2026 11:53
China's Secondary Aluminum Alloy Ingot Inventory Rises 365 mt WoW to 27,900 mt in Key Regions
[SMM Update] China's mainstream consumption areas saw secondary aluminum alloy ingot inventory increase by 365 mt WoW to 27,900 mt. Foshan, Ningbo, and Wuxi all maintained slight inventory buildup.
Apr 27, 2026 09:16
Ferrous Metals May Consolidate at Highs in the Short Term [SMM Steel Industry Chain Weekly Report]
This week, ferrous metals continued their rebound trend, with finished products outperforming raw materials. Early in the week, the rally was primarily driven by raw materials, as uncertainty over the Middle East situation combined with market rumors of restricted Mongolian coal shipments boosted the coal sector, with other ferrous metals following suit. Mid-week, the General Offices of the CPC Central Committee and the State Council issued the "Opinions on Achieving Higher-Level and Higher-Quality Energy Conservation and Carbon Reduction," which covered the steel industry, strengthening market expectations for supply-side reform. In the latter half of the week, data on the five major steel products were released, showing increases in both supply and demand along with inventory drawdowns, with finished products rallying more strongly than raw materials. Spot market side, as futures rose consecutively, end-user purchasing enthusiasm increased somewhat, the spot-futures price spread narrowed mid-week, and there was bargain-hunting activity in spot cargo...
Apr 24, 2026 18:45
[SMM Market Insight] Copper at $13,000/t in a Surplus Market — What’s Going On?
[SMM Market Insight] Copper at $13,000/t in a Surplus Market — What’s Going On?
This insight follows panel discussions at SMM’s London H1 2026 seminar, where one theme stood out clearly: funds are trumping fundamentals in today’s copper market. At first glance, the setup looks contradictory. There is no clear physical shortage of copper: near-term time spreads are in contango, signalling adequate supply; SMM forecasts a small global refined surplus in 2026; global exchange stocks are rising. On traditional metrics, prices should be softer. Yet LME copper remains elevated at around $13,000/t. This leads us to believe that copper is no longer trading purely on market fundamentals. So What Is Driving Copper Higher? Financial flows dominate price formation Speculative inflows since the middle of last year have played a key role in pushing copper higher. The recent rally following the initial shock of the US-Iran war is no exception. While some capital has rotated into energy markets recently, inflows into copper and broader commodities have remained resilient, supported by macro funds and systematic positioning. Momentum-driven strategies (CTAs, macro funds) have reinforced upside moves, especially during periods of positive price signals and cross-asset risk appetite. This can be seen from the bottom right hand-side chart which shows speculative positions from the LME’s Commitment of Traders Report (COTR). There has also been selective physical support, particularly from China, where downstream buying and restocking have contributed to declining local inventories at times. However, this physical demand has been opportunistic rather than structural, and insufficient on its own to explain the persistence of elevated prices. Overall, barring the initial geopolitical shock, copper price strength has been largely investor-led rather than consumer-led, with financial capital remaining the dominant marginal driver of price formation. A persistent geopolitical premium Supply risks remain elevated across key producing regions; energy and input cost volatility (e.g. sulphuric acid and diesel) adds uncertainty to production; trade fragmentation and resource nationalism are reshaping supply chains; copper is increasingly priced as a strategic resource, not just a commodity. Policy distortions — particularly from the US Tariff expectations and US government policy aimed at securing domestic supply chains — including potential import tariffs on copper, incentives for local processing, and broader reshoring of manufacturing — have triggered regional stockpiling. This has tightened availability ex-US and distorted global trade flows, as material is increasingly drawn into the US market. In effect, policy is creating artificial tightness in specific regions, even as the global market remains broadly balanced. Structural narrative outweighs current balance Electrification, grid expansion, and AI infrastructure continue to anchor long-term demand; supply constraints (declining ore grades, permitting delays) remain unresolved. As such, the market is pricing future deficits today, not current surplus. Why Surplus Does Not Equal Lower Prices The key misunderstanding in today’s market is treating copper like a static balance sheet. The surplus is marginal and unevenly distributed. Inventories are not necessarily located where demand is strongest. The market reacts to marginal tightness and risk, not annual average. Most importantly, copper is a forward-looking asset — it prices sentiment and expectations, not just spot fundamentals. How Traders Think About Copper Now Copper price formation has evolved into a multi‑layered system according to our panellists: Price = Fundamentals + Financial Flows + Macro + Narrative By this, we mean that copper prices are driven by four interacting components — Fundamentals, Financial Flows, Macro, and Narrative — and traders now analyse each layer in more depth to anticipate price direction. They: Watch financial conditions — positioning, flows, momentum, correlations Traders look at who holds risk, how strong the flows are, and whether momentum is building or fading. Cross‑asset signals — especially from US equities and major commodity indices — show whether copper is trading as part of a broader risk‑on move or reacting to something more specific. Track macro drivers — interest rates, policy, USD, liquidity Copper reacts quickly to shifts in US real yields, Fed expectations, and the strength of the dollar. Easier financial conditions or a weaker USD can lift prices even when demand is soft. Global liquidity trends, including China’s credit cycle, influence how much speculative capital enters the market. Monitor policy and geopolitics — tariffs, sanctions, trade flows, disruptions Policy decisions now move copper as much as fundamentals. Tariffs, sanctions, and export controls reshape trade flows and create regional imbalances. Geopolitical tensions and supply disruptions — from strikes to permitting delays — reinforce the market’s focus on future scarcity. Stay grounded in physical stress points — inventories, premiums, scrap Headline stocks matter less than where the metal sits. Traders watch regional inventory tightness, premiums, treatment charges, and scrap availability to understand real physical stress. These signals reveal whether the market is genuinely tight or simply trading a narrative. The consensus is that as long as capital flows remain strong, geopolitical risks persist, and the market prices future scarcity, copper can stay elevated — even in surplus. Where Next for Copper? As for immediate near-term dynamics, the copper market is treading water, increasingly driven by headline risk. Recent price action has been closely tied to developments around the Iran crisis, highlighting just how far copper has shifted into the macro arena. The closure of the Strait of Hormuz presents a two-sided risk for copper: On the bullish side , the Gulf is a major exporter of sulphur, a critical input for sulphuric acid used in leaching processes. With solvent extraction and electrowinning accounting for roughly a quarter of global refined output, continued disruptions to acid supply could tighten production, particularly in the DRC, and support prices. On the bearish side , higher energy prices risk triggering a broader slowdown in global manufacturing, weakening copper demand. The longer the disruptions persist, the greater the downside risk to consumption. With investors firmly in control of price formation, copper has effectively become part of a multi-asset macro trade on the trajectory of the Iran conflict. In this environment, both bulls and bears are less anchored to supply-demand balances and more dependent on the next geopolitical headline. Author: Shairaz Ahmed, Principal Market Analyst For more information or to discuss market dynamics, you can contact me on shairazahmed@smm.cn
May 6, 2026 00:08
[SMM Analysis] The April turn: how Chinese stainless mills came around to higher NPI prices
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Copper Prices and Premiums Fluctuate Amid Supply and Demand Shifts in Q1 2026
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Global Aluminum Market Review – April: Divergent Domestic & Overseas Trends and Marked Spot Structure Disparities
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Apr 30, 2026 23:43
【SMM Analysis】Beyond the US & EU: How Anti-Dumping and Green Hydrogen are Reshaping South American Steel Industry
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