Ex-US and ex-Japan scrap sold to South Korea

Wednesday, 27 November 2019 16:58:33 (GMT+3)   |   Istanbul
       

Some scrap price increases have been confirmed in new deals from the US and Japan to South Korea, following a long break in activity, SteelOrbis has learned on Wednesday, November 27.

About 30,000 mt of HMS I, traded by a US-based supplier, have been sold at $275/mt CFR to Hyundai Steel, according to a number of sources. There were no deals with US scrap suppliers earlier in November, but nominal prices were not higher than $270/mt CFR before this deal was done.

In the fresh deal to South Korea disclosed this week, about 30,000 mt of ex-Japan H2 scrap changed hands at JPY 25,000/mt ($229/mt) FOB last week, up JPY 1,000/mt ($9/mt) from previous bookings. This level corresponds to $250-255/mt CFR South Korea.

Following the latest bookings, offer prices for ex-Japan H2 have started to come to Vietnam at $270/mt CFR at the lowest (against $265-270/mt CFR last week. Import offers for HMS I/II to Vietnam have increased by $5/mt to $285/mt CFR.


Similar articles

US scrap market shows signs of another sideways trend in May

18 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials

Ex-Europe scrap prices in Turkey remain firm, market still mostly silent

18 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials

Carbon and stainless scrap prices in Taiwanese domestic market - week 16, 2024

18 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials

Tokyo Steel cuts scrap purchase price only for Utsunomiya plant

18 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials

Scrap imports in Bangladesh still muted after holiday, prices edge up

18 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials

Australian Steel Institute seeks prohibition on unprocessed scrap exports

18 Apr | Steel News

Import scrap prices in India harden as suppliers remain bullish, trading slows

17 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials

Pakistan’s import scrap prices rise, but trade fails to recover after holiday

17 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials

Local Chinese scrap prices increase, demand recovery limited

17 Apr | Scrap & Raw Materials

Taiwan’s scrap imports down 2.9 percent in January-March

17 Apr | Steel News