You are currently viewing the beta version of the new AMM site. Click here to return to the current site.
Results 1-10 of 463 for melting grade premium. (0.086368 seconds)
relevance / newest first / oldest first
... market activity continues to languish, with market participants reporting little consumer interest and unchanged premiums. Melting-grade nickel was ... View this article
... on an as-needed basis at a premium because they ... this time considering the cost of melting and production ... buy primary scrap for mill grades of RSI ... View this article
Melting-grade nickel premiums are unchanged in a range of 15 to 25 cents per pound, while plating-grade nickel premiums also are steady at ... View this article
NEW YORK — Melting-grade nickel premiums remained at a ten-year low of 15 to 25 cents per pound, with traders continuing to lament a dearth of ... View this article
... 1 heavy melting scrap dropped with the rest of ... appears to be less of that grade available. ... 1 heavy melt into shredders because shred commands a ... View this article
... to work toward achieving premium-quality standing ... qualify its sponge for rotor-grade components. ... rotating parts—has been melting and processing ... View this article
NEW YORK — Melting-grade nickel premiums are steady in a ... on the LME, but the premiums are unchanged ... such a big thing of the premium, but it's ... View this article
NEW YORK — Melting-grade nickel premiums continue to ... and we should see premiums coming up ... t see that 15-cent premium being sustainable.". ... View this article
AMM's melting-grade nickel premiums have dropped to ... The current premium range represents the lowest ... 2003, when US spot premiums were as ... View this article
AMM's melting-grade nickel premiums remain in a range of 18 to 25 cents per pound, while plating-grade premiums also are unchanged at 50 to 60 ... 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