[SMM Stainless Steel Daily Review] SS futures price drifts higher, spot stainless steel transactions remain sluggish.

Published: Jun 29, 2026 15:26
[SMM Stainless Steel Daily Review] SS Futures Drift Higher, Spot Stainless Steel Transactions Remain Sluggish According to SMM on June 29, SS futures held up well. Base metals futures overall showed strength, and SS futures also rose in tandem. As of the close, the most-traded SS futures contract settled at 14,770 yuan/mt. In the spot market, although SS futures recovered somewhat, affected by recent market fluctuations, downstream wait-and-see sentiment was heavy. Coupled with already weak demand in the off-season, spot prices mostly held steady and transactions remained sluggish. SS futures most-traded contract. At 10:15 AM, SS2608 was at 14,715 yuan/mt, up 45 yuan/mt from the previous trading day. Spot premiums for 304/2B in Wuxi were in the range of 355-855 yuan/mt. In the spot market, average prices were unchanged for: Wuxi cold-rolled 201/2B coil; cold-rolled 304/2B raw edge coil in Wuxi and Foshan; Wuxi cold-rolled 316L/2B coil; Wuxi hot-rolled 316L/NO.1 coil; and cold-rolled 430/2B coil in both Wuxi and Foshan. This week, stainless steel futures and spot prices consolidated with a weaker bias. Ex-China macro headwinds, coupled with industry sentiment disruptions, heated up market pessimism, with off-season fundamentals fully evident. Overall, the pattern was one of macro pressures weighing on futures, weakening off-season demand, traders cutting prices to reduce inventory, supply contraction underpinning inventory levels, and shrinking steel mill profits. Futures were dragged lower by monetary policy and raw material rumors, while spot prices sustained resilience supported by steel mills holding prices firm. However, end-user transactions were sluggish, and the overall market was bearish. Futures…

 

According to SMM on June 29, SS futures held up well. Nonferrous metals futures performed strongly overall, and SS futures also rose. By the close, the most-traded SS contract settled at 14,770 yuan/mt. In the spot market, despite some recovery in SS futures, cautious wait-and-see sentiment among downstream users remained strong amid recent market fluctuations. Coupled with already weak demand in the consumption off-season, spot prices mostly held stable, and trading remained sluggish and difficult to improve.

The most-traded SS futures contract. At 10:15 a.m., SS2608 was at 14,715 yuan/mt, up 45 yuan/mt from the previous trading day. Spot premiums for 304/2B in Wuxi were in the 355–855 yuan/mt range. In the spot market, the average price of cold-rolled 201/2B coil in Wuxi was flat; cold-rolled 304/2B coil with mill edge, the average price in Wuxi was flat and in Foshan was flat; cold-rolled 316L/2B coil prices in Wuxi were flat; hot-rolled 316L/NO.1 coil quoted in Wuxi was flat; cold-rolled 430/2B coil in both Wuxi and Foshan were flat.

This week, stainless steel futures and spot markets consolidated with a weaker bias. Overseas macro headwinds combined with industry sentiment disruptions sent market pessimism higher, fully exposing the off-season fundamentals. The overall pattern featured macro pressure on futures, weakening off-season demand, traders cutting prices to reduce inventory, supply contraction supporting inventory, and shrinking steel mill profits. Futures were dragged lower by monetary policy and raw material rumors, while spot held firm on steel mill price-supporting efforts showing resilience, but end-user trading was sluggish, leaving the overall market bearish. On the futures side, macro headwinds dominated moves this week. The easing US-Iran conflict slightly boosted risk appetite, but the US Fed’s hawkish stance lifted rate hike expectations, weighing on the valuation of the entire nonferrous complex. Mid-week, rumors of expanded Indonesian nickel ore quotas surfaced; although officials later denied them, market pessimism had already spread, triggering capital flight from risk and dragging SS futures to drift lower. In terms of spot and inventory, this week saw clear divergence between futures and spot, with spot showing stronger resilience than futures. Mainstream steel mills held a strong willingness to hold prices firm, effectively defending the price floor. However, the market entered the traditional consumption off-season, end-user rigid demand continued to weaken, and the falling futures further undermined market confidence, leaving end-users with strong wait-and-see sentiment and sluggish in-market trading. Traders were strongly motivated to reduce inventory, leading to frequent low-priced offers. Meanwhile, steel mill maintenance and production cuts materialized, marginally shrinking supply and cushioning off-season demand pressure, keeping total social inventory broadly stable with no significant fluctuations this week. On the cost and profit side, finished steel and raw materials diverged this week, with steel mill profits continuously squeezed. Stainless steel spot prices pulled back alongside futures, shifting the price center lower. But high-grade NPI supply tightness is expected to persist, keeping prices relatively resilient with limited declines, while raw material costs remained rigid. The combination of declining finished steel prices and firm costs directly compressed smelting profits, further intensifying overall industry profitability pressure. Overall, the market was dominated by macro headwinds this week, as weak off-season rigid demand served as the core fundamental pressure. Steel mills held prices firm and supply contraction supported spot cargo and inventory, but failed to reverse the weak market trend. The rigid cost of high-grade NPI continued to pressure steel mill profits. In the short term, futures were still disrupted by US Fed policies and Indonesia nickel news, and the weak supply-demand pattern in the off-season was hard to change. Going forward, the key focus should be on tracking rate-hike expectations, SS futures fluctuations, downstream rigid demand, steel mill maintenance progress, and price trends of nickel raw materials.

Data Source Statement: Except for publicly available information, all other data are processed by SMM based on publicly available information, market communication, and relying on SMM's internal database model. They are for reference only and do not constitute decision-making recommendations.

For any inquiries or for more information, please contact: lemonzhao@smm.cn
For more information on how to access our research reports, please contact:service.en@smm.cn
Related News
[SMM HRC Daily Trading] Spot Trading Volume Increased
1 hour ago
[SMM HRC Daily Trading] Spot Trading Volume Increased
Read More
[SMM HRC Daily Trading] Spot Trading Volume Increased
[SMM HRC Daily Trading] Spot Trading Volume Increased
[SMM HRC Daily Trading] On June 29, the total daily HRC trading volume of the sampled enterprises in SMM's four cities (Shanghai, Lecong, Tianjin, Ningbo) was 12,790 mt, up 190 mt or 1.6% day-on-day, down 7.79% YoY (calendar) and up 8.76% YoY (lunar).
1 hour ago
MMi Daily Iron Ore Report (June 29)
1 hour ago
MMi Daily Iron Ore Report (June 29)
Read More
MMi Daily Iron Ore Report (June 29)
MMi Daily Iron Ore Report (June 29)
Today on the DCE iron ore futures first weakened and then strengthened, with contract I2609 finally closing at 746 yuan/ton, up 0.67% from the previous trading session. Port spot prices were unchanged from the previous trading day. Trader activity was moderate, and steel mills purchased on an as-needed basis, with spot transaction volumes remaining lackluster so far.
1 hour ago
[SMM Sheets & Plates Daily Review] Sheets & Plates Consolidate, Short-Term Focus on Cost Sentiment
1 hour ago
[SMM Sheets & Plates Daily Review] Sheets & Plates Consolidate, Short-Term Focus on Cost Sentiment
Read More
[SMM Sheets & Plates Daily Review] Sheets & Plates Consolidate, Short-Term Focus on Cost Sentiment
[SMM Sheets & Plates Daily Review] Sheets & Plates Consolidate, Short-Term Focus on Cost Sentiment
Today, the most-traded HRC contract traced an "N"-shaped pattern, closing at 3,319 with an intraday gain of 0.21%. Spot HRC prices were mostly stable, with some markets edging lower to facilitate transactions. On the supply side, no new rolling line maintenance was added this week, while previously idled lines gradually resumed production, leading to expectations of a slight increase in overall HRC output. On the demand side, current demand fully reflected off-season characteristics, with the market dominated by low-price deals. Amid the contango structure, some new hedging-related demand was released, though it remained cautious. On the cost side, the 9th round of coke price increases was about to take effect. Additionally, after the market closed, rumors circulated about a coal mine accident in Shanxi and customs clearance restrictions at the Mongolian border, which may provide a short-term emotional jolt. Looking ahead, the fundamentals of sheets & plates themselves remain weak in the short term, lacking bullish support. The focus remains on the cost side, whether on sentiment fluctuations driven by physical realities or expectations. However, relatively speaking, the extent to which sheets & plates follow these swings is limited.
1 hour ago
Register to Continue Reading
Gain access to the latest insights in metals and new energy
Already have an account?Sign in here