SMM, June 11: This week, transaction sentiment in China's aluminum fluoride enterprise sector was moderate, and aluminum fluoride prices remained stable. As of now, SMM aluminum fluoride prices closed at 11,280-11,700 yuan/mt; cryolite prices were stable, with SMM quotations at 7,000-8,500 yuan/mt. Raw material side: This week, China's 97% fluorite wet powder market was steady, with mainstream delivery-to-factory prices at 3,100-3,400 yuan/mt and notable regional price spreads. Supply side, mine operations in the north continued to recover, and domestic spot supply increased steadily; imported cargoes from Mongolia arrived at ports gradually, further easing the supply surplus. However, recent coal mine accidents in Shanxi triggered market expectations of stricter mine safety and environmental protection supervision, which may cause periodic disruptions to some mine production subsequently, maintaining a wait-and-see sentiment on the supply side. Demand side remained persistently weak, as downstream hydrofluoric acid enterprises were dragged by insufficient terminal operating rates for refrigerants and fluoropolymers, resulting in primarily just-in-time procurement with limited large orders. Affected by weak raw materials and insufficient end-use demand, the price center for hydrofluoric acid shifted downwards, weakening support for fluorite. Overall, the domestic supply recovery, replenishment of low-priced imports, and sluggish downstream demand combined as multiple bearish factors, resulting in a loose supply-demand pattern, and short-term fluorite prices are likely to remain under slight downward pressure. This week, China's aluminum hydroxide market held up slightly, with the SMM weighted average price for aluminum hydroxide at 1,663 yuan/mt, edging up 0.4% MoM. Upstream costs underpinned spot offers, while downstream purchases were made as needed, limiting volume growth. This week, China's sulphuric acid market was in a stalemate at highs and moved sideways. Sulphur prices surged again, continuously strengthening bottom-level cost support; losses at sulphuric acid plants led to production cuts, and combined with ongoing maintenance at many acid plants, regional spot supply was differentiated and tight. Although the phosphate fertiliser industry was mired in losses and off-season procurement remained restrained, capping upside room, just-in-time procurement from the new energy LFP sector and base-level purchases from some chemical enterprises provided a floor. In the short term, the sulphuric acid market is consolidating at highs, stuck between upward and downward pressures. Overall, raw material markets for aluminum fluoride diverged this week, with rising aluminum hydroxide and sulphuric acid prices pushing the industry's overall cost center higher. Cost increases from raw materials were difficult to pass downstream smoothly, intensifying cost pressure on enterprise production. Supply side, the operational pattern of "rigid high costs—persistent profit pressure—low operating rates" continued. With sulphuric acid and aluminum hydroxide prices rising this week, the industry was generally in a state of losses, leading to more maintenance and flexible production at enterprises. The industry operating rate remained low at around 40%, with limited effective incremental supply. Demand side, downstream operating aluminum capacity stayed high and stable, forming rigid floor demand for aluminum fluoride, but aluminum smelters' procurement focused on just-in-time restocking and pushing for lower prices with a wait-and-see approach, with no additional incremental demand. Commentary: This week, raw material markets for aluminum fluoride showed mixed performance. Stronger aluminum hydroxide and sulphuric acid prices further pushed up overall costs, continuously squeezing enterprise operating profits. The industry maintained a "triple pressure" structure of high costs, low profits, and low operating rates, making it difficult to boost production enthusiasm. The market currently lacks a directional driver, with the tug-of-war between upstream and downstream causing a stalemate. Transactions were limited to just-in-time procurement. In the short term, aluminum fluoride prices are likely to remain stable, with limited room for wild swings. Close attention should be paid to subsequent developments in raw material cost dynamics and marginal adjustments in the procurement pace of downstream aluminum enterprises.
Jun 11, 2026 18:48\LME aluminium prices have retreated steadily from their late-May peak, falling from nearly $3,680 per metric ton to around $3,480 per metric ton. More notably, the LME aluminium Cash-3M spread narrowed sharply over just one week, dropping from a cash premium of $104.56 per metric ton on June 1 to $15.17 per metric ton on June 9, a loss of nearly $90 per metric ton. This marks the steepest contraction in the backwardation structure since the outbreak of the Middle East conflict.
Jun 11, 2026 18:06【SMM Steel】On June 9 2026, Vallourec and Ultra Corpotech Pvt Ltd signed a Memorandum of Understanding to deploy VAM threading capabilities near Mumbai, India. A dedicated threading cell is scheduled for implementation in late 2026 with commissioning in early 2027, aiming to provide premium thread protection and related services for the Indian oilfield services sector. The asset-light cooperation allows both parties to respond quickly to regional demand with minimal capital footprint. Vallourec will license its VAM threading and inspection technology along with quality control system support. The agreement reflects a strategic shift for Vallourec as the company expands access to its premium connection technology through local partners in Asia, following similar agreements with Vietnam Process Equipment and Technology Joint Stock Company in March 2025 and Saudi Arabia's Industrial Investment Company in November 2025.
Jun 11, 2026 16:59Over the next 1-2 weeks, the domestic petroleum coke market is expected to mainly edge lower amid stability. Low-sulphur petroleum coke prices will face relatively greater downward pressure, while mid and high-sulphur petroleum coke may see limited declines due to rigid demand support from the prebaked anode industry. The overall market will remain in the doldrums.
Jun 11, 2026 16:56[Price Review] This week (6.8-6.11), silver extended its accelerated decline, with both international and domestic futures markets plunging sharply in tandem. The price center moved notably lower WoW, hitting a new low in nearly two months. The non-farm payrolls data triggered the first heavy sell-off: on June 5, the US May non-farm payrolls report showed an increase of 172,000 jobs, far exceeding the market expectation of 85,000; data for the prior two months were revised up by a combined 93,000, and the unemployment rate held at a historic low of 4.3%. Following the release, market expectations for US Fed rate hikes surged sharply, and silver immediately suffered a heavy blow. On June 10, the US May CPI data came out, up 4.2% YoY and 0.5% MoM. The inflation data further cemented market expectations that the US Fed would maintain high interest rates. Paired with renewed deterioration in the US-Iran conflict, with US forces striking Iran for two consecutive days, the US Fed was expected to have difficulty releasing dovish signals in the near term. Industrial demand side, the premium of standard silver ingots against TD mainstream quotations in the Shanghai market continued to rise WoW; mainstream quotations were generally at parity or with slight premiums, and most transactions settled in the range from parity against SGE TD to a premium of 10 yuan/kg. As silver prices plunged during the week, downstream inquiry activity was relatively active. Inventory side, downstream consumption recovered somewhat WoW, and some smelters showed lower willingness to sell due to falling prices, so social inventory of silver ingots in Shanghai and Shenzhen destocked overall. Gold/silver ratio side, as of June 10, the LBMA gold/silver ratio widened from 63.8 a week ago to 67.2, highlighting silver's greater weakness relative to gold under sustained macro pressure. [Important Data] Bearish US May non-farm payrolls rose by 172,000, far exceeding expectations, with labor market resilience surprising to the upside. US May CPI up 4.2% YoY, a three-year high, as inflationary pressures re-emerged. After taking office as Fed Chairman, Warsh set a clear hawkish tone, and subsequent official remarks continued to send tightening signals. India's silver import control policy remained in place, weighing on physical consumption demand. Bullish: Peru's energy crisis persisted, with a national state of emergency until year-end; 12 large mines have already implemented staggered production, and May silver output is expected to decline by 5%–8%. The global supply-demand gap remains, providing some floor support for silver prices. [What to Watch] June 16-17: US Fed June FOMC meeting and Warsh post-meeting press conference (key event) June 18: US May retail sales data June 20: University of Michigan preliminary June consumer sentiment index Key focus: Fed official speeches, latest developments in US-Iran negotiations. [Price Forecast] Silver is expected to maintain a pattern of hovering at lows and seeking a bottom next week, remaining under an overall high macro pressure environment. The Fed's FOMC meeting from June 16 to 17 will be the core focus next week, with the market closely watching Wash's speech content and the Fed's latest guidance on the interest rate path. If the Fed releases a clear signal of rate hikes, silver prices may dip further; if the meeting outcome leans dovish, silver prices could see a rebound from oversold conditions. On the domestic fundamentals side, downstream purchases have slightly recovered, pressure from spot selling at lows in the market has eased somewhat, and the social inventory of spot silver ingots is destocking overall. Since most enterprises remain cautious amid heavy fear of price declines, mainstream traded spot premiums are expected to remain in a range of parity to a 10 yuan/kg premium over SGE TD, and the market is unlikely to quickly shift to higher premiums in the near term.
Jun 11, 2026 16:38According to the Brazil Steel Institute (Aço Brasil), Brazil's finished steel trade deficit compressed sharply by 59.2% year-on-year during the first five months of 2026, dropping to 503,000 metric tons (mt) from 1.23 million mt in the same period of 2025. Cumulative finished steel imports for January-May 2026 fell by 21.6% year-on-year to 1.41 million mt, while domestic sales by Brazilian mills advanced by 6.7% year-on-year to 8.08 million mt, elevating total apparent domestic consumption to 9.07 million mt. Crude steel production for the period registered a 4.7% increase to 14.15 million mt, whereas total exports contracted slightly by 1.8% to 906,000 mt. The market impact highlights the immediate protective efficiency of Brazil’s newly deployed 25% tariff-rate quota (TRQ) system and anti-dumping measures. By successfully turning back low-priced import volumes, these trade blocks have redirected bulk procurement back to domestic mills, allowing local steelmakers to secure their home market share and stabilize regional pricing baselines despite challenging global demand headwinds.
Jun 11, 2026 16:30[SMM Lithium Battery Electrolyte Market Weekly Review: Electrolyte Prices Remain Stable This Week (2026.6.8-6.11)] From June 8 to 11, 2026, electrolyte prices remained stable. Supported by raw material costs and underpinned by downstream demand, electrolyte prices are expected to remain stable in the short term.
Jun 11, 2026 16:17[SMM Tin Noon Review: SHFE tin contracts fluctuated downward but spot trades turned sluggish, energy prices pushed up inflation hubs outside China]
Jun 11, 2026 11:552026-06-10 15:25PM UTC While markets have been focused on the recent sharp decline in gold prices, the broader precious metals sector has also experienced significant selling pressure, with platinum-group metals suffering some of the steepest losses, according to a report from Bank of America. Both platinum and palladium recently fell to their lowest levels of the year amid continued pressure from the global economic slowdown and geopolitical tensions. Global economic weakness and Middle East tensions weigh on platinum-group metals Commodity analysts at the bank said the rally in platinum-group metals lost momentum since late January, largely due to gold’s price action and persistent economic headwinds linked to the conflict in the Middle East, which continue to weigh on industrial metals demand. Despite the recent weakness, the bank maintained its positive long-term outlook for the sector, noting that it remains constructive on gold heading into the fourth quarter. A renewed gold rally could attract investors back into platinum-group metals and help support prices. Spot platinum fell to around $1,711 per ounce, down more than 2% during the session, while palladium traded near $1,203 per ounce, up roughly 0.5%. Since the sharp selloff on Friday, platinum has lost more than 9% of its value, while palladium has fallen over 6%. Higher price targets despite weak industrial and jewelry demand Despite current pressures, Bank of America still expects platinum to average around $3,000 per ounce by the fourth quarter of 2026 through the first half of 2027. Palladium is expected to average around $2,200 per ounce during the final three months of the year. Platinum-group metals delivered strong gains during 2025 as global trade tensions and threats of tariffs on precious metals created significant disruptions in physical market liquidity. However, analysts noted that most of those concerns eased after tariff threats failed to translate into broad implementation. According to the report, the absence of tariffs resulted in more than 200,000 ounces of platinum leaving NYMEX warehouses, roughly half of the inflows recorded during the second half of 2025. Palladium, meanwhile, saw outflows in late January before flows reversed after the US Department of Commerce imposed final anti-dumping duties of 133% and countervailing duties of 109% on Russian palladium. Structural shifts in demand The bank also highlighted structural changes in demand for platinum-group metals. Platinum is expected to record a modest supply deficit this year, while palladium is forecast to remain in a slight surplus. Analysts pointed to China’s accelerating transition toward electric vehicles as a major source of market volatility, given the reduced demand for internal combustion engine vehicles that rely heavily on platinum-group metals in catalytic converters. Electric vehicles are expected to account for roughly 40% of China’s light-vehicle production this year, surpassing conventional combustion-engine vehicles for the first time. Traditional vehicles are projected to represent 36% of production, while hybrids account for 24%. Production of internal combustion vehicles in China has already fallen to approximately 14 million units in 2025, down from 21 million in 2020. By contrast, the transition to electric vehicles remains slower in Europe and the United States, particularly after Washington scaled back some of its earlier electrification initiatives. Weak jewelry demand in China Demand for platinum jewelry has also slowed, especially in China, where elevated inventories accumulated during the manufacturing boom of mid-2025 continue to pressure the market. Although some of those inventories have already been recycled, retailers still hold large stockpiles while consumer demand remains weak, raising the risk of a significant contraction in Chinese jewelry manufacturing volumes this year. Energy costs threaten South African production Despite uncertainty surrounding global demand, Bank of America believes supply-side risks could become increasingly important. The bank noted that ongoing Middle East tensions, higher energy prices, and inflationary pressures could negatively affect production, particularly in South Africa, one of the world's largest producers of platinum-group metals. South Africa relies heavily on imported oil, has limited domestic production capacity, and faces ongoing refining constraints, leaving its mining sector highly exposed to rising fuel costs. Diesel remains widely used across mining operations, transportation networks, and backup power generation, especially given the country's persistent electricity shortages. Diesel prices have surged since the conflict began, while state utility Eskom raised electricity tariffs by 8.76% beginning in April 2026, significantly increasing mining costs. In this context, Sibanye-Stillwater reported a 13% year-over-year increase in unit operating costs during the first quarter, citing persistent inflationary pressures, including higher labor and energy expenses. In trading on Wednesday, spot palladium rose 1.5% to $1,249 per ounce as of 16:14 GMT. Source: https://www.economies.com/commodities/palladium-news/palladium-attempts-to-recover-losses-as-bank-of-america-maintains-a-bullish-outlook-49044
Jun 11, 2026 11:20[SMM Morning Meeting Minutes: US-Iran Tensions Cause Market Concerns, LME Zinc Plunges] Overnight, LME zinc opened at $3,549/mt. Initially, after a brief uptick, LME zinc fell to a low of $3,520.5/mt. Subsequently, bears added positions, and LME zinc fell all the way to a low of $3,465.5/mt near the end of trading, finally closing down at $3,468.5/mt, down $77.5/mt, a decline of 2.19%. Trading volume increased to 17,248 lots, and open interest rose by 568 lots to 234,000 lots.
Jun 11, 2026 08:50