[SMM Chrome Daily Review] Overseas Market Prices Lowered, Sluggish Trading and Weak Market

Published: May 20, 2026 15:58
[SMM Chrome Daily Review: Overseas Market Offers Lowered, Sluggish Trading and Weak Market] May 20, 2026: The ferrochrome and chrome ore market fluctuated slightly...

On May 20, 2026, high-carbon ferrochrome retail quotations saw slight adjustments. Inner Mongolia high-carbon ferrochrome held steady at 8,250-8,400 yuan/mt (50% metal content); low- and micro-carbon ferrochrome quotations were down 50 yuan WoW to 13,300-13,600 yuan/mt (50% metal content).

The ferrochrome market continued in the doldrums during the day. Downstream demand remained sluggish, with poor purchase inquiries. Most participants adopted a wait-and-see approach pending next month's steel mill bidding prices, with mainstream expectations of flat pricing and some producers slightly bearish. Cost side, chrome ore overseas market quotations were cut again, with frequent low-price spot cargo dumping, pushing ferrochrome costs lower and weakening support, leaving producers notably lacking in confidence. Additionally, according to China Customs data, China's ferrochrome imports edged up to 145,100 mt in April 2026. The impact of ex-China ferrochrome production resumptions was gradually feeding through to China. Combined with China's ferrochrome production staying high with expectations of further increases, the surplus issue will weigh on ferrochrome price performance going forward, maintaining an in-the-doldrums trend in the short term.

Raw material side, on May 20, 2026, Tianjin port 40-42% South African fines, 40-42% Turkish lumpy ore, and 48-50% Zimbabwean fines quotations were down 0.25 yuan/mtu from the previous trading day. On the CIF futures front, the latest quotation for 40-42% South African fines was $300/mt.

Chrome ore futures and spot quotations fell further during the day. Spot side, chrome ore shipments stayed high at 2.8 million mt, with concentrated port arrivals recently, making a short-term pullback in port inventory unlikely. According to China Customs data, China's total chrome ore imports in April 2026 were 2.3278 million mt, with no adjustment to the loose supply pattern. Ore suppliers' confidence weakened notably, with frequent concession-based shipments and continued quotation cuts. Meanwhile, downstream ferrochrome plants maintained a strong wait-and-see attitude. Under a "bearish rather than bullish" mentality, recent purchase inquiries were limited, with insufficient actual transactions, and both sides remained in a stalemate. Futures side, the major South African fines overseas mine's weekly quotation was down $5 WoW to $300/mt, with other categories of chrome ore quotations also pulling back accordingly. Currently, traders still hold bearish expectations for future ore prices, exercising extreme caution in purchases, mostly transacting on a just-in-need basis, with strong wait-and-see sentiment across the market. Looking ahead, chrome ore supply is expected to remain in a loose pattern, with downside room for further fluctuation in the short term, as the market awaits next month's steel mill bidding prices.

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 to learn 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 Steel] EU Steel Quota Cuts Raise Concerns Over Ukraine’s Export Losses
10 mins ago
[SMM Steel] EU Steel Quota Cuts Raise Concerns Over Ukraine’s Export Losses
Read More
[SMM Steel] EU Steel Quota Cuts Raise Concerns Over Ukraine’s Export Losses
[SMM Steel] EU Steel Quota Cuts Raise Concerns Over Ukraine’s Export Losses
[SMM Steel] Ukraine’s steel industry warned that the EU’s planned steel safeguard revisions could significantly reduce the country’s export revenues and damage its wartime economy. Under the new measures effective from July 1, the EU plans to cut steel import quotas by 47% and impose a 50% tariff on out-of-quota volumes. Ukrainian steelmakers said the restrictions could sharply limit access to their largest export market, as Ukraine exported around 2.65 million mt of steel to the EU last year. Industry sources estimated the proposed quota reductions could cut export volumes by around 70% and result in up to €1 billion in lost export revenues.
10 mins ago
[SMM Steel] Italy’s April Steel Output Rises, Long Products Continue Strong Growth
10 mins ago
[SMM Steel] Italy’s April Steel Output Rises, Long Products Continue Strong Growth
Read More
[SMM Steel] Italy’s April Steel Output Rises, Long Products Continue Strong Growth
[SMM Steel] Italy’s April Steel Output Rises, Long Products Continue Strong Growth
[SMM Steel] Italy’s crude steel output increased by 7.2% y-o-y to 1.93 million mt in April 2026, reaching the highest monthly level in the past four years, according to Federacciai. January-April steel production rose 2.9% y-o-y to 7.6 million mt. Long steel output remained the main growth driver, rising 12.3% y-o-y in April to 1.2 million mt, while January-April long product production increased 10.5% y-o-y to 4.6 million mt. In contrast, flat steel output continued weakening, falling 9.3% y-o-y in April to 743,000 mt, reflecting softer demand conditions in the European flat steel market.
10 mins ago
[SMM Steel] EU Approves Stricter Steel Safeguard Measures with 50% Out-of-Quota Tariff
11 mins ago
[SMM Steel] EU Approves Stricter Steel Safeguard Measures with 50% Out-of-Quota Tariff
Read More
[SMM Steel] EU Approves Stricter Steel Safeguard Measures with 50% Out-of-Quota Tariff
[SMM Steel] EU Approves Stricter Steel Safeguard Measures with 50% Out-of-Quota Tariff
[SMM Steel] The European Parliament approved new steel safeguard measures effective from July 1, pending final approval by EU member states. The new regime sets a 18.3 million mt annual steel tariff-rate quota with a 50% out-of-quota duty covering 30 steel product categories and country-specific quotas. EU officials said the measures will apply equally to all third countries, including Ukraine and FTA partners. Some lawmakers supported stricter import controls to protect the EU steel industry, while others warned that high energy costs, decarbonization policies, and EU ETS-related costs continue to pressure European steelmakers.
11 mins ago
Register to Continue Reading
Gain access to the latest insights in metals and new energy
Already have an account?sign in here