You are currently viewing the beta version of the new AMM site. Click here to return to the current site.
Results 1-10 of 1000 for AMM consumer buying price. (0.548465 seconds)
relevance / newest first / oldest first
The surcharge reflects the AMM consumer buying price for No. 1 busheling scrap in Chicago, which stood at $380 per ton. ... View this article
... and president Fred Federoff for helping to facilitate the purchase. ... Copper consumers recently failed in their attempt to block the ... (amm.com, April 10 ... View this article
... raw materials has led downstream consumers of steel products to delay several purchase decisions, causing ... in the market today (amm.com, June 3 ... View this article
... The buyer said that consumers in Thailand have managed ... A buyer for a South Korean consumer said he ... cfr Pusan, Korea, but was buying at $320 ... View this article
... zorba like they used to," one exporter told AMM. ... "My buyers are always buying—they need ... When people say that Chinese consumers are not being ... View this article
... with few transactions reported as consumers chose to ... contractual obligations for June (amm.com, May ... in North America," a consumer source said. ... View this article
... over the summer, market participants told AMM. ... any means," a second consumer source said ... August, with many consumers traditionally conducting ... View this article
... "I haven't bought a single ... beam mills announce their raw material surcharges after AMM settles its consumer buying price for shredded ... View this article
... levels, but the late entry of two consumers meant final ... Overall, AMM's June assessment for No ... We definitely came out of the gate buying at sideways ... View this article
... The majority of traders contacted by AMM this past week ... as long-term contracts cover the majority of consumer requirements ... I haven't bought a thing ... View this article
1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | Next
What is causing the most weakness to the U.S. metals industry?
June 20-21, 2013 New York
Our industry and the U.S. economy are not realizing the full benefits of (higher steel demand) due to recent significant surges of imported tubular products.
--Mario Longhi, U.S. Steel