You are currently viewing the beta version of the new AMM site. Click here to return to the current site.
Results 1-10 of 178 for DLA Strategic Materials. (0.034008 seconds)
relevance / newest first / oldest first
NEW YORK — DLA Strategic Materials is again offering more than 1,148 short tons of ... The low-carbon material is composed of 840,000 pounds of ... View this article
NEW YORK — DLA Strategic Materials is offering more than 3,100 short tons of high ... US market and 1,145 tons of 76.45-percent material from Japan ... View this article
... Alloys LLC have purchased low-carbon ferrochrome from DLA Strategic Materials for a ... 840,000-pound lot of 0.13-percent-carbon material and an ... View this article
NEW YORK — DLA Strategic Materials is offering more than 1,148 short tons of ... The low-carbon material is composed of 840,000 pounds of 0.13 ... View this article
DLA Strategic Materials is again offering 2000 short tons of 76.76-percent high ... domestic market and 1145 tons of 76.45-percent material from Japan ... View this article
... GfE-MIR AG purchased ferrochrome from DLA Strategic Materials for a ... The DLA sold all of the 1,000 short ... and 0.15-percent carbon material, a DLA ... View this article
... result in a fall in pricing, and no increase in supply. The DLA (Strategic Materials) is the only prompt material in this market.". ... View this article
... some market participants again citing the impact of DLA Strategic Materials sales. ... of $2.02 to $2.07 previously, while 0.15-percent material held in a ... View this article
NEW YORK — DLA Strategic Materials is again offering 1,000 short tons of high ... The low-carbon material is composed of 840,000 pounds of 0.13 ... View this article
... The failure of Fort Belvoir, Va.-based DLA Strategic Materials to log sales also is a ... Of course, the minute the market goes up, more material floods in ... 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