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2Q Cr benchmark highlights cracks in price mechanism

  • : Metals
  • 20/04/24

Europe's second quarter charge chrome benchmark price was raised this week after a lengthy negotiation. But many market participants are questioning its suitability as a key pricing reference given the 22 day delay to its settlement and the price rising despite a backdrop of deteriorating demand.

The second quarter benchmark has been set at $1.14/lb, up from $1.01/lb in the first quarter. It is negotiated between the South African Glencore-Merafe joint venture and Aperam, a European stainless steel producer.

Sources close to the negotiations said the Covid-19 crisis and subsequent lockdown in South Africa were "key factors" in the delay to the benchmark's announcement and price increase.

The delay has resulted in many market participants rolling over the first quarter benchmark price into their second quarter contracts. Some of those contracts will now be backdated, but others will not, meaning most of April's deliveries will be linked to the first quarter price of $1.01/lb, according to market participants. The impact of the delay was mitigated somewhat by low demand globally, owing to production shutdowns at steel mills.

The price is also generating controversy, with some market participants regarding such a large price increase as unjustified. One trader said the benchmark price "amounts to a special agreement between Glencore-Merafe and Aperam, not fit for purpose". That said, as yet it is too soon to say whether the wider market will actually move toward a departure from the current benchmark-based pricing system.

Glencore-Merafe has warned customers about the potential for a force majeure in South Africa in recent weeks, but there has been no official notice of this and some traders suggested it might have been part of a negotiating tactic for the benchmark price. However other South African charge chrome producers have declared force majeure, such as Samancor, on 31 March.

One buyer at a large European stainless steel producer said using the benchmark had become "unreliable" and that switching from charge chrome usage to high carbon ferro-chrome appeared "immediately more attractive". This would mean entering the spot market more regularly or linking contracts to a high carbon alloy index price. Argus assessed high carbon ferro-chrome prices at 79-85¢/lb delivered duty paid (ddp) on 24 April, much lower than the average over the last five years of $1.01/lb.

Depressed high carbon ferro-chrome prices are encouraging the market to move away from charge chrome in a more structural way. A ramp up in high carbon alloy output in India and Kazakhstan has pushed prices down over the past year, putting pressure on South African producers. China and Indonesia-based Tsingshan's ability to smelt their own ferro-chrome from chrome ore has put a further squeeze on them.

Charge chrome is typically produced in South Africa by large producers including Samancor, Glencore-Merafe, Afarak, and in smaller amounts in Zimbabwe and Oman. The ongoing crisis at state-owned utility Eskom has lifted electricity costs in South Africa, making it harder for producers to compete with high carbon alloy producers elsewhere. Before the coronavirus outbreak, Samancor warned that it might cut over 3,000 jobs because of low prices.

European steel mills could also turn away from charge chrome after the most recent benchmark. As one buyer at a steel mill said, "it's not mandatory to use charge chrome".


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Brazil gov must boost EV demand: Li miners


25/07/11
25/07/11

Brazil gov must boost EV demand: Li miners

Sao Paulo, 11 July (Argus) — At least four suppliers in the Brazilian spodumene market voiced interest in federal policies to boost demand for electric vehicles (EVs) to create a consolidated end-to-end battery supply chain in Brazil, the companies said at a conference in Minas Gerais. In an initiative led by Companhia Brasileira de Litio (CBL), executives for AMG Lithium, Lithium Ionic and PLS all pleaded for the Brazilian federal government to implement policies to boost EV demand — which would support the Brazilian spodumene market — CBL's chief executive Vinicius Alvarenga said. CBL owns the only lithium carbonate refinery in Brazil and it believes the country has the potential to have an end-to-end battery supply chain. Currently, Chinese refineries receive 99pc of all lithium chemicals produced in Brazil. "The only thing stopping Brazilian companies to make battery cells is the lack of demand from the regional market," Alvarenga said. "We need to pressure the government to incentivize the installation of lithium-based energy storage systems and to give more benefits to EV buyers." Alvarenga mentioned WEG — a multidisciplinary technology company — and Moura, the largest battery manufacturer in Latin America, as firms well suited for the job. "Brazil can be one of the world's top players in the energy transition landscape," said Leandro Gobbo, vice-president for Brazilian operations at PLS. "We have world class ore, the expertise and the technology to do so — we only lack government incentives." At the bottom of the cost curve, Brazil has one of the cheapest hard-rock lithium operations in the world, rivaling China and beating Australia and many African producers. Although China holds its place as the home to the cheapest hard-rock lithium projects in the world, Brazilian miners are also operating at a profit despite the low price environment, mainly because of cheap labor. Around half of the world's hard-rock lithium miners are currently operating at a loss. All three commercially producing spodumene companies in Brazil — Sigma Lithium, CBL and AMG — are sticking to their investment guidance and expansion plans despite falling prices. "There is an opportunity here at this low-price environment," said Blake Hylands, chief executive of Lithium Ionic, owner one of the largest undeveloped spodumene sites in Brazil. "We need to move projects forward at this time so Brazil can progress in the global stage." The average labor costs in Brazil are significantly lower than in places like Australia, which is also dealing with a workforce shortage in mining, according to Gobbo, and where employee wages have pushed most spodumene operations to operate at a loss as prices bottom. "Brazil will never beat China in capital costs and internal demand," Alvarenga said. "But despite taking a hit at those two, Brazil is the best place in the world to produce spodumene." Brazil has a combination of benefits that are not seen elsewhere, such as low royalties, a specialized workforce, solid internal and external logistics, market transparency, legal stability, high ESG and human rights standards, and the cheapest electrical energy in the world, Alvarenga said, which is mostly renewable. "If we look at other countries with cheap [spodumene] production, we don't see that," said Ligia Pinto, vice-president of external affairs at Sigma Lithium, Brazil's top lithium concentrate producer. "Our low costs do not harm human rights." The so-called Lithium Valley — a spodumene rich region in Southeast Brazil — has a production capacity of 320,000 metric tonnes (t)/yr of lithium concentrate between CBL and Sigma Lithium, the country's top producer. AMG Lithium, which operates further south, bumps up Brazil's total current capacity to 410,000t/yr. "This is a country that we can trust," Hylands said. "We are taking longer than China, but that's okay, because everyone takes longer than China." By Pedro Consoli Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Canadian ferrous scrap dodges lastest US tariff threat


25/07/11
25/07/11

Canadian ferrous scrap dodges lastest US tariff threat

Pittsburgh, 11 July (Argus) — Canadian goods compliant with the US-Mexico-Canada trade agreement (USMCA), which include ferrous scrap metal, will maintain their exemption status from proposed new US import tariffs on the country, according to a White House official. President Donald Trump announced a 35pc tariff on all imports from Canada effective 1 August in a letter to Canadian prime minister Mark Carney yesterday . A White House official told Argus exemptions currently covered by the USMCA will remain in place. But until the new tariff rate officially goes into effect uncertainty will likely remain a source of concern for market participants. Canada is a major shipper of ferrous scrap metal to the US, particularly shred and #1 busheling. In 2024, the US imported an average of 230,000 metric tonnes (t)/m of ferrous scrap. US imports of Canadian ferrous scrap totaled 1mn t through May, down by 10pc from the prior year. By Brad MacAulay and Haik Gugarats Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Trump threatens 35pc tariff on Canada by 1 August


25/07/11
25/07/11

Trump threatens 35pc tariff on Canada by 1 August

Houston, 10 July (Argus) — The US will impose a 35pc tariff on all imports from Canada effective on 1 August, President Donald Trump said in a letter to Canadian prime minister Mark Carney. The 10 July letter that Trump posted on social media late Thursday noted that Canada previously planned retaliatory tariffs in response to the US' first tariff threats in the spring. He repeated his earliest justification for the tariffs - the illegal smuggling of fentanyl into the US from Canada - and said he would consider "an adjustment" to the tariffs if Canada worked with him to stop that flow. The 35pc tariff would be separate from tariffs set for specific sectors, which include a 50pc tariff on copper imports . It is not clear if any imports currently covered by the US-Mexico- Canada trade agreement (USMCA) would be affected by the new tariff threats. The Trump administration since 5 April has been charging a 10pc extra "Liberation Day" tariff on most imports — energy commodities and critical minerals are exceptions — from nearly every foreign trade partner. Trump on 9 April imposed even higher tariffs on key trading partners, only to delay them the same day until 9 July. On 7 July, Trump signed an executive order further delaying the implementation of higher rates until 12:01am ET (04:01 GMT) on 1 August. Earlier this week he threatened 50pc tariffs against Brazil for its ongoing criminal prosecution of former president Jair Bolsonaro. Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

EnergyX to buy Smackover Li deposits


25/07/10
25/07/10

EnergyX to buy Smackover Li deposits

Houston, 10 July (Argus) — US lithium extraction company Energy Exploration Technologies (EnergyX) agreed to acquire Daytona Lithium, securing ownership of 35,000 gross acres of lithium brine resources in the Smackover Formation of Arkansas. EnergyX said today the deal is valued at A$40mn ($26mn), comprising A$6mn in cash and A$34mn in common stock. The acquisition expands EnergyX's Smackover footprint, building on its existing 12,500 acres to nearly 50,000 acres in total. It also extends EnergyX's Project Lonestar in northeast Texas, aimed at producing 50,000 metric tonnes (t)/yr of lithium hydroxide by 2030, with an initial phase of 12,500t/yr by 2028. EnergyX plans to vertically integrate its direct lithium extraction technology to produce low cost lithium. The acreage sits adjacent to Exxon, Chevron, and Standard Lithium in the Smackover. "The race is on" to see who will be the first to produce commercial battery grade lithium products, said EnergyX chief executive Teague Egan. Daytona Lithium is a wholly owned subsidiary of Australia-based Pantera Lithium. By Carol Luk Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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