Latest market news

Unprecedented cost rise batters Al alloy margins

  • Market: Metals
  • 21/09/21

European aluminium alloy producers are facing huge pressure on profit margins as costs rise swiftly across all raw material markets, and alloy prices will need to rise further to sustain production even as demand from the domestic automotive industry suffers under the semiconductor shortage.

Alloy prices are most influenced by raw material costs, mainly through movements in the price of scrap metal — the primary feedstock for alloy production in Europe. But other costs include silicon and magnesium metal for alloying purposes, as well as gas for smelter furnaces, in addition to general power and logistics costs.

Every one of those costs is currently rising sharply, mostly because of factors external to the European market.

The biggest driver is, unsurprisingly, China. Base metal prices have almost all hit multi-year highs this quarter, mostly owing to strong industrial activity in China since its economy began to recover from Covid-19 lockdowns last year. London Metal Exchange (LME) aluminium prices reached 13-year highs of above $2,900/t this month, up by 16pc from the start of the quarter.

LME aluminium prices affect scrap prices, particularly among the higher grades of scrap such as aluminium wheels, which have a larger aluminium element and fewer impurities than other scrap grades.

Argus' assessment for aluminium wheel scrap delivered to European smelters has risen to €2,000-2,050/t ($2,345-2,400/t) this month, up by 23.9pc from the end of August.

But all scrap prices are rising on strong demand from export markets in Asia-Pacific, predominantly to supply China. Lower-grade scraps have not risen as sharply as the higher grades this month, but have strengthened throughout the year and the consistent driving factor has been high export demand.

European taint/tabor scrap prices have reached €1,400-1,450/t this month, up by 5.9pc from the end of August and by 11.8pc from the start of the quarter.

Meanwhile, prices for the silicon and magnesium units that go into alloy production have rocketed this month on output cuts in China, leading to limited supply held by European traders.

Argus' assessment for 5-5-3 grade silicon is at €4,000-4,200/t ddp, a 15-year high and up by 46.4pc since the beginning of September. This is largely down to China's Yunnan province imposing energy consumption controls for September-December, aimed at reducing its silicon output by 90pc from August levels.

Magnesium prices have reached $5,000-5,150/t delivered Rotterdam, up by 9.7pc from the start of the month.

European gas prices have tripled this year, while the eurozone energy consumer price index has reached its highest level since records began in 1996.

Alloy prices have been rising strongly in response, with DIN 226 alloy reaching €2,100-2,200/t last week, up by 10.5pc from the start of September. Prices are racing higher even as the European automotive market has slowed because of the continuing shortage of semiconductors for vehicles. Strong demand for alloys and scrap, most notably from China but also from European primary aluminium producers looking to boost their environmental credentials, has offset much of the lost nearby demand.

While European alloy producers have sold strong volumes for the fourth quarter to automotive manufacturers, almost all of those contracts include clauses that allow customers to defer delivery, as automotive customers have done repeatedly this year because of slowdowns caused by the shortage of electrical semiconductor parts for vehicles.

No relief in sight

None of the factors driving the market show any sign of going away soon. There has been strong demand for scrap and alloy units from export markets since the start of 2020, and it only took a temporary dip during the initial Covid lockdowns.

The shortage of semiconductors has been an issue throughout 2021 and is expected to last well into next year, which will increase alloy producers' dependence on export markets for alloy sales as they look to offload volumes they will have left to sell after deferments on deliveries to automotive companies.

LME aluminium prices look robust at higher levels, after forward spreads moved into a strong contango in recent weeks and stocks started to fall at LME warehouses. On-warrant aluminium stocks dropped by more than 120,000t in the first two days of this week alone — a fall of almost 15pc.

Silicon and magnesium prices will stay high as long as supply is scarce, and the production outlook depends on China, where a lot of metals manufacturing has been curtailed in recent months because of environmental concerns.

Alloy producers will hope that the semiconductor shortage is alleviated sooner rather than later, or that long-term demand sources can be found elsewhere, because the confluence of high costs that is driving massive pressure on alloy profit margins does not look like it will abate any time soon.


Sharelinkedin-sharetwitter-sharefacebook-shareemail-share

Related news posts

Argus illuminates the markets by putting a lens on the areas that matter most to you. The market news and commentary we publish reveals vital insights that enable you to make stronger, well-informed decisions. Explore a selection of news stories related to this one.

News
03/01/25

Nippon Steel condemns Biden move to block US Steel bid

Nippon Steel condemns Biden move to block US Steel bid

Tokyo, 4 January (Argus) — Japanese firm Nippon Steel has condemned President Joe Biden's decision to block its proposed $15bn acquisition of US Steel citing national security concerns arising from a Japanese company owning a major US steelmaker. The US president has "sacrificed the future of American steelworkers for his own political agenda", Nippon Steel said. "It is clear that the CFIUS (committee on foreign investment in the United States) process was deeply corrupted by politics and the outcome was pre-determined to satisfy the political objectives of the Biden administration," Nippon Steel added. The company pledged to save the deal by "taking all appropriate action to protect our legal rights". Nippon Steel warned that Biden's decision sends a chilling message to any company based in a US-allied country contemplating significant investment in the US. "It is shocking and deeply troubling that the US government would reject a pro-competitive transaction that advances US interests and treat an ally like Japan in this way," the company said. Biden's decision is hard to understand and regrettable, especially given that it was made after consideration of US national security, Japan's trade and industry minister, Yoji Muto, said. Tokyo will seek to clarify with the Biden administration the decision-making process followed by the CFIUS, Muto added. Japan's trade and industry ministry (Meti) agrees with Nippon Steel that the transaction would contribute to sustaining steel production capacity and employment in the US economy, Muto said, adding that the acquisition would be of mutual benefit. "The deal is to promote collaboration on advanced technologies and increase the competitiveness of the US and the Japanese steel industry," he added. The Japanese government must take this matter seriously, Muto reiterated, given growing concern among Japanese industries regarding the future US-Japan investment climate. Japanese business federation Keidanren in September wrote an open letter to US treasury secretary Janet Yellen, who chairs the CFIUS, expressing concern about political pressure being brought to bear on the committee. By Yusuke Maekawa Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Find out more
News

Biden blocks Nippon Steel’s bid for US Steel


03/01/25
News
03/01/25

Biden blocks Nippon Steel’s bid for US Steel

Pittsburgh, 3 January (Argus) — President Joe Biden blocked Nippon Steel's proposed $15bn acquisition of US Steel today citing national security concerns with a Japanese company owning a major US steelmaker. Biden said evidence suggests that Nippon Steel "might take action that threatens to impair the national security of the US" if it owned US Steel. Nippon Steel, based in Tokyo, proposed buying US Steel in December 2023, outbidding other suitors, including US steelmaker Cleveland-Cliffs. US Steel corporate leadership said Nippon's investment would be the best way forward for the Pennsylvania company's aging integrated steel mills in Pittsburgh and northern Indiana. The United Steelworkers labor union opposed the sale to Nippon from the outset. US Steel shareholders approved the acquisition last year, but the merger became a political issue during the presidential election, which centered around Pennsylvania's electoral votes. Both Biden and president-elect Donald Trump vowed to block the sale of US Steel, which is among the top four US steelmakers, but no longer the powerhouse it was in the 20th century. Biden's move could have broader implications for foreign investment, in part because Japan is a staunch US ally in Asia. Nippon Steel did not immediately respond to a request for comment on its plans for the deal. Biden's statement today said Nippon must abandon the deal within 30 days. By James Marshall Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

Western RE refining projects attempt 2025 push


03/01/25
News
03/01/25

Western RE refining projects attempt 2025 push

London, 3 January (Argus) — Attempts to establish commercial-scale rare earth separation and processing outside China are growing in number and progressing gradually with a view to ramping up output over the next two years. Mineral resources developers are scrambling to reassess and upgrade their estimates of mineable rare earth element (REE) content as western governments attempt to encourage producers to establish production closer to home. And new efforts to develop high-volume processing capacity outside China — which currently accounts for more than 80pc of global refining — are emerging. Western countries are well behind China in advancing technical processes to refine REs from raw materials, as they seek alternatives to the highly polluting solvent extraction process. But with China banning the export of RE extraction and separation technologies in December 2023, as well as exports to the US of key electronic metals in December 2024, the impetus is growing to come up with viable Western production. RE oxides are used in the manufacturing of permanent magnets for electric vehicle (EV) motors, wind turbines and electronics, as well as batteries, lasers, metal alloys, medical devices and military equipment. Given that latter application, the US Department of Defense (DoD) has awarded more than $439mn in financing since 2020 to support a new domestic supply chain, from the separation and refining of materials mined in the US to downstream production of magnets. In a broader trend towards "friendshoring" of critical material supply, the DoD considers Canada, Australia and the UK as domestic suppliers. In December alone, several western companies announced progress in their plans to build production capacity. Northeast Wyoming in the US has one of the highest-grade deposits in North America, which firms such as Wyoming Rare USA and Rare Element Resources are looking to develop. Other projects in the US include ReElement Technologies in Indiana, Rainbow Rare Earths in Florida and Lynas in Texas. Energy Fuels in Utah and Phoenix Tailings in Massachusetts are in production, ramping up volumes to meet market demand. These facilities would spread the supply chain across the US, expanding from MP Materials in California, which has previously been the only commercial-scale facility in the country. In Canada, developer Ucore Rare Metals in December received a payment of $1.8mn from the US DoD, part of a $4mn award to conduct REE separation work at the company's RapidSX commercial demonstration facility in Kingston, Ontario. Ucore is also developing its flagship project, the Louisiana Strategic Metals Complex, in a foreign trade zone it said will provide an advantage if the incoming Trump administration implements tariffs and other trade measures. Reflecting the competition between countries for limited processing capacity, Ucore said it intends to continue the DoD project in the first half of 2025 and then turn to completing its C$4.28mn light REE demonstration project with the Government of Canada. Canada is home to one of the first in the wave of new western producers, as the government-backed Saskatchewan Research Council (SRC) started producing neodymium-praseodymium (NdPr) metal during the summer. Like the US, European countries are also targeting domestic production in a bid to secure their supply chains. Projects include the expansion of Nd and NdPr processing capacity at UK-based Less Common Metals (LCM), the addition of NdPr production at Belgian chemical group Solvay at its plant in France in 2025 and French consultancy Carestar's plan to start production in 2026 of RE oxides from mining concentrates and, later, recycled magnets. REEtec in Norway plans to start a commercial NdPr plant in 2025 and Swedish state-owned LKAB plans to start an RE oxide demonstration plant by the end of 2026. These initiatives are in line with plans across Europe to increase EV manufacturing and renewable energy. Rare earth mining projects in Africa and Australia are largely targeting supply deals or integrated production in Asia or North America. Miners in Brazil, such as Aclara, are also planning integrated production by developing separation plants close to demand in the US and Europe. By Nicole Willing Key projects outside of China Producer Location Production status Refined rare earth elements American Resources Noblesville, Indiana, US In development, refining achieved at validation facility Terbium (Tb), Dysprosium (Dy), Neodymium (Nd), Praseodymium (Pr) Lynas Corporation Kuantan, Malaysia; Kalgoorlie, Australia; Texas, US Operational (Malaysia, Australia); In development (Texas) Dy, Tb, NdPr, Samarium (Sm), Europium (Eu), Gadolinium (Gd), Holmium (Ho) Phoenix Tailings Burlington, Massachusetts, US Operational (heavy and light rare earth metals) Dy, Tb, NdPr Rare Element Resources Upton, Wyoming, US Demonstration plant operational Light and heavy REs Energy Fuels White Mesa Mill, Utah, US Operational, Phase 1 commissioned NdPr; Dy, Tb to come Ucore Rare Metals Kingston, Ontario, Canada; Alexandria, Louisiana, US Demonstration plant operational; Louisiana facility planned for 2025 start Light and heavy REs Aclara Resources Goiás, Brazil; Bio-Bio, Chile; US (separation plant) In development Heavy REs (Dy, Tb); NdPr in US Ionic Rare Earths Belfast, UK; Minas Gerais, Brazil In development Recycled oxides (e.g., NdPr, Dy, Tb) Pensana Plc Saltend, UK; Longonjo, Angola Under construction Mixed RE carbonate, magnet metals (NdPr, Dy, Tb) Saskatchewan Research Council (SRC) Saskatchewan, Canada Operational (commercial scale) NdPr Iluka Resources Eneabba, Western Australia Under construction RE oxides Solvay La Rochelle, France Operational; capacity expansion in 2025 Nd/NdPr to come Less Common Metals Ellesmere Port, Cheshire, UK Operational; Nd/NdPr capacity expansion ongoing Nd, NdPr, Dy, Ferro-Dysprosium (DyFe), Tb, Samarium-Cobalt (SmCo) alloy LKAB Lulea, Sweden Demonstration plant planned to start operations by end 2026 RE oxides Carester Lacq, France Production planned for 2026 Heavy REs (Dy, Tb) MP Materials Mountain Pass, California, US; Fort Worth, Texas, US Mountain Pass operational, Forth Worth in commissioning NdPr, cerium, lanthanum and heavy rare earth concentrate; metals, alloys and finished magnets at Fort Worth Rainbow Rare Earths Lakeland, Florida, US Separation pilot plant in testing Nd and Pr initially; Dy, Tb, then Sm, Eu, Gd in future development Australian Strategic Materials Ochang, South Korea Operational Nd metal and alloy USA Rare Earth Stillwater, Oklahoma In development Heavy rare earths Neo Performance Materials Estonia Operational NdPr Mkango Resources Pulawy, Poland Separation plant planned NdPr oxide, heavy REs REEtec Norway Commercial plant planned for 2025 NdPr Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

EU HRC imports top 500,000t at start of 2025


03/01/25
News
03/01/25

EU HRC imports top 500,000t at start of 2025

London, 3 January (Argus) — At least 530,000t of hot-rolled coils (HRC) have been put forward for customs clearance in the EU as of yesterday, according to newly-reset safeguard quotas data tracked by Argus . This includes 181,874t of Japanese and 150,920t of Vietnamese material. Each country has a duty-free allowance of 138,766t per quarter, which indicates a pro-rata safeguard duty will be payable. It is not yet clear if these are the final volumes, as the new year holidays could be skewing the availability of some customs data, while buyers in some countries such as Italy have the possibility to cancel their custom clearance, which they have done regularly in the past. However some may be less inclined to do so this quarter, given the ongoing anti-dumping investigation in the bloc on Japan, Vietnam, India and Egypt, which market participants expect will result in retroactive tariffs. The awaiting allocation volume for Egypt stands at 76,143t, and no HRC is pending clearance from India. Meanwhile, 111,848t of Taiwanese material have been put forward for import. January imports will most likely be higher than November and December, as has become the norm in the first month of a new quarter, but they are on track to be lower than in October , when comparing customs clearance volumes then. As of 1 October, 875,339t were awaiting allocation. EU import data, published by Argus , further shows that over 200,000t from Vietnam, Japan and Taiwan were ultimately pulled back from customs clearance in October. Despite this, ramped up Turkish and Ukrainian imports later on in the month, and some additional volumes from South Korea, Serbia, Australia and Indonesia, brought the overall October arrivals to 1.2mn t. By Lora Stoyanova EU HRC custom clearance as of 2 January* t Awaiting allocation Quota allocation Turkey 7,832 464,844 India 0 295,145 South Korea 1,175 184,310 UK 20 154,182 Serbia 70 163,621 Others Egypt 76,143 138,766 Vietnam 150,920 138,766 Japan 181,874 138,766 Taiwan 111,848 138,766 Australia 0 138,766 Switzerland 0 138,766 US 0 138,766 Libya 0 138,766 Canada 0 138,766 - European Commission * Pending final clearance volumes Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

News

India’s PTC Industries adds Ti ingot capabilities


02/01/25
News
02/01/25

India’s PTC Industries adds Ti ingot capabilities

Houston, 2 January (Argus) — Components manufacturer PTC Industries — through its Aerolloy Technologies subsidiary — commissioned its new vacuum arc remelting (VAR) furnace, allowing it to produce titanium alloy ingots that potentially can be used for aerospace and defense applications. The furnace has an annual melting capacity of 1,500 metric tonnes (t), turning out ingots up to 1,000mm in diameter and up to 10t in weight, the Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh-based company said on Wednesday. PTC Industries acquired the VAR furnace in 2022, seeking to expand its position within the global titanium supply chain after the start of the Ukraine conflict that compelled some western companies to no longer source the metal from Russia's VSMPO-AVISMA. The company did not disclose whether Aerolloy had begun the product qualification process with downstream consumers, a necessary step before the ingots can be accepted for commercial use. PTC currently supplies titanium casting parts to Safran Aircraft Engines and BAE Systems, among other domestic and international customers. Starting up the VAR furnace, which PTC Industries touts as being India's first, brings the company closer to its goal of becoming an integrated supplier of titanium products throughout the metal's value chain. Aerolloy in late August acquired a hot-rolling mill for manufacturing plates and sheets, adding to its product mix that includes billets, bars and rods. Argus last assessed US prices for 6Al 4V ingot at $11-11.75/lb fob US producer this week, down from $11.25-12/lb at the end of November. Domestic titanium mills have sought to maintain outflows, willing to seller lower in recent months, after a strike at aerospace manufacturer Boeing that halted aircraft production led to companies in its supply chain to reduce their ingot requirements in the fourth quarter. By Alex Nicoll Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Generic Hero Banner

Business intelligence reports

Get concise, trustworthy and unbiased analysis of the latest trends and developments in oil and energy markets. These reports are specially created for decision makers who don’t have time to track markets day-by-day, minute-by-minute.

Learn more