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| Stainless Steel scrap |
US stainless steel surcharges fell for many finished flat and bar products in April, putting fresh pressure on stainless scrap processors. North American Stainless, Outokumpu, ATI, and Marcegaglia lowered several published surcharges, reducing the ability of processors to pass higher scrap costs through to consumers.
US stainless steel surcharges for 301 and 304 flat-rolled coil declined by 0.5-1.6¢/lb compared with March. The move came despite a sharp rise in processor 304 scrap solids prices since the start of the year.
US stainless steel surcharges therefore created a margin squeeze across the scrap-processing chain. Processors said mill scrap demand had not changed much, while consumer prices had failed to rise enough to offset higher buying competition for stainless scrap.
304 Stainless Scrap Prices Rise While Mill Surcharges Ease
Supply competition pushed processor 304 scrap solids prices up by 13.5¢/lb since the beginning of the year. However, lower April surcharges made it harder for processors to lift selling prices and protect margins.
NAS, Outokumpu, and ATI reduced April surcharges for 301 and 304 flat-rolled coil. Although 304 flat-rolled surcharges remained 13-15¢/lb higher than a year earlier, the latest monthly decline weakened near-term pricing momentum.
Stainless bar products also moved lower in several categories. NAS and Marcegaglia reduced 303, 304, and 17-4 bar surcharges by 1¢/lb, while Marcegaglia’s 15-5 bar surcharge dropped by 10¢/lb. Marcegaglia also lowered its 416 bar surcharge by 0.5¢/lb, although NAS raised its 416 surcharge by 0.5¢/lb.
316 Stainless Scrap Holds Better on Molybdenum Support
The 316 stainless market showed more resilience because elevated molybdenum prices continued to support alloy surcharges. Flat-rolled 316 surcharges rose by 0.1-1¢/lb in April and have increased by 30-31¢/lb since the start of the year.
Delivered processor 316 solids prices rose by 11¢/lb over the same period. The smaller-volume 316 scrap market remained firmer than 304 because molybdenum-bearing scrap supply is tighter and more directly linked to alloy input costs.
The short-term outlook remains cautious. One processor said May demand could slow from April, suggesting that stainless scrap prices may face resistance if mills reduce buying or if finished stainless demand weakens.
The Metalnomist Commentary
The US stainless market is showing a classic margin conflict between scrap processors and mills. Scrap costs have risen sharply, but lower surcharges weaken processors’ ability to recover those costs unless mill demand strengthens again.

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