Early this week, the market continued to trade around the progress of the US-Iran ceasefire and the volatile Middle East situation. Trump agreed to suspend strikes on Iran for two weeks, and Iran also accepted the temporary ceasefire proposal. Risk appetite recovered on a phased basis, and copper prices were briefly boosted. Subsequently, the US-Iran temporary ceasefire agreement was finalized, and the US dollar index pulled back to a one-month low, further supporting a rebound in copper prices. However, as the ceasefire agreement remained fragile, some of the truce terms proposed by Iran had already been violated, compounded by recurring disruptions to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, the market consistently maintained caution over the sustainability of the agreement. By the latter part of mid-week, Israel sought peace talks with Lebanon, ceasefire expectations warmed again, and overall market sentiment tilted toward optimism. Overall, the macro theme this week remained the marginal easing of Middle East tensions driving risk appetite recovery and the US dollar pullback supporting copper prices, but geopolitical volatility kept the market cautious, and copper prices held up well overall. On the fundamentals side, the copper concentrates tightness narrative continued to ferment. Smelter procurement remained aggressive; meanwhile, sulphuric acid prices surged significantly recently, notably offsetting smelting losses, and the actual profits generated from smelting further intensified smelters' competition for raw materials. Another noteworthy change on the supply side was that the Panamanian government approved First Quantum's plan to process and export stockpiled materials from the shut-down Cobre Panama mine, involving approximately 38 million mt of stockpiled ore and approximately 70,000 mt of recoverable copper. However, this measure did not equate to a formal restart of the mine, and the short-term incremental impact on copper raw material supply remained relatively limited. Affected by the Middle East situation, on one hand, reports emerged that two smelters in Iran had halted production; on the other hand, petrochemical-related product supply in Southeast Asia and Japan was disrupted. Both supply and demand sides saw declines. In contrast, China's consumption remained robust, with notable support from downstream orders. Looking ahead to next week, the macro narrative is expected to remain largely unchanged for now. If the ceasefire agreement holds, risk appetite may continue to recover, and a weaker US dollar is also expected to provide some support for copper prices. However, given the potential for renewed volatility in the Middle East and the fact that shipping disruptions through the Strait of Hormuz have not been fully resolved, upside for copper prices is expected to remain constrained. On the fundamentals side, ore supply tightness and deteriorating smelting margins continue to support the price floor, and copper prices are expected to move sideways with an upward bias in the short term. LME copper is expected to fluctuate between $12,300-12,850/mt, and SHFE copper between 96,000-99,000 yuan/mt. Spot cargo side, as the futures center shifts higher, downstream willingness to chase higher prices may be suppressed, but if the price spread between futures contracts widens only modestly, spot premiums are still expected to remain firm.
Apr 10, 2026 12:29[SMM Analysis: Review of the Manganese Ore Market in 2024 and Outlook for 2025] I. Price: In 2024, the annual average price of 46% Australian lump at Tianjin Port was 47.66 yuan/mtu, up 16.02% YoY; the annual average price of 45.5% Gabonese lump at Tianjin Port was 45.72 yuan/mtu, up 17.77% YoY; and the annual average price of 37.5% South African semi-carbonate lump at Tianjin Port was 37.31 yuan/mtu, up 15.87% YoY. From the quarterly price review: 2024 Q1: Supply side, manganese ore port arrivals decreased MoM, but combined with previous manganese ore inventory, supply remained sufficient. Demand side, alloy plants mainly made just-in-time procurement, and port inventory destocking accelerated. Overall, despite just-in-time procurement by alloy plants, the supply surplus of manganese ore pressured price increases, leading to manganese ore prices fluctuating downward. 2024 Q2: Influenced by news of disruptions in mine shipments, overseas miners showed strong sentiment to stand firm on quotes. Supply side, manganese ore port arrivals continued to decline, and miners were reluctant to sell, resulting in tight market circulation. Demand side, alloy plants with manganese ore inventory showed strong willingness to resume production, and manganese alloy production increased, boosting procurement enthusiasm for manganese ore and significantly driving up spot prices.
Jan 17, 2025 18:17This week, chrome ore inventory at national ports significantly declined, down 398,000 mt WoW. The inventory at main ports nationwide is approaching the 2 million mt mark, reaching 2.1337 million mt, a yearly low. Among them, Tianjin Port's inventory decreased by 353,000 mt WoW, dropping to 1.5937 million mt, with the inventory-to-sales ratio reduced to 1.15……
Aug 16, 2024 18:31The cyclone in Australia impacted manganese ore exports, leading to a significant short-term supply crunch.
Jun 4, 2024 14:30Regarding domestic mines, according to an SMM survey, as temperatures gradually rise, some regions in China that had previously reduced or halted zinc concentrate production are gradually resuming operations. From January to April, the domestic zinc concentrate operating rate and monthly output increased month by month.
Jun 3, 2024 17:59In early March, no stronger-than-expected policy from the Two Sessions made market sentiment bearish.
Apr 10, 2024 09:42PB fines spot prices are now around 990 yuan/mt at Qingdao port.
Feb 19, 2024 16:34Imported iron ore stocks at 35 Chinese ports totaled 109.85 million mt as of November 17, down 900,000 mt WoW and 21.69 million mt YoY.
Nov 17, 2023 15:26SHANGHAI, May 19 (SMM) –Affected by sluggish refined oil prices, some petroleum coke refineries slightly lowered their production.
May 19, 2023 11:05
SHANGHAI, May 11 (SMM) - Iron ore inventories across the ten major ports in China fell 3.1% MoM to 88.78 million mt as of April 28.
May 11, 2023 16:35