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| JDC |
Jinduicheng Molybdenum output declined slightly in ferro-molybdenum alloy production in 2025, even as sales increased on firm demand from steelmakers. The Shaanxi-based producer made around 22,483t of molybdenum metal equivalent for ferro-molybdenum alloy, down 1.6% from a year earlier.
Jinduicheng Molybdenum output trends showed mixed performance across its product portfolio. Ferro-molybdenum sales rose by 8.8% to 23,664t, while ammonium molybdate production increased by 5% to 7,602t of molybdenum metal equivalent.
Jinduicheng Molybdenum output of molybdenum powder fell more sharply, declining by 14.4% to 5,011t. The result suggests the company adjusted production across product lines as alloy demand and downstream steel consumption shaped market conditions.
Steelmaker Tenders Supported Molybdenum Consumption
China’s molybdenum market remained supported by stronger steel-linked demand in 2025. Domestic tender volumes from major steelmakers rose by 5.7% on the year to 160,000t.
The sustained increase in molybdenum consumption required additional concentrate feedstock during the year. Molybdenum remains important for special steel and stainless steel because it improves strength, corrosion resistance and high-temperature performance.
Domestic unroasted molybdenum concentrate output reached 317,900t in 2025, up only 0.6% from the previous year. This modest supply growth kept attention on mine output and concentrate availability.
Mine Capacity Could Balance the 2026 Market
JDC’s main mining assets include the Jinduicheng Mine, with 13mn t/yr of ore processing capacity, and the Ruyang Donggou Mine, with 9mn t/yr of capacity. These assets keep the company central to China’s molybdenum supply chain.
The company expects possible capacity increases at several domestic mines to offset stronger demand from special steel and stainless steel producers in 2026. This could create a more balanced supply-demand situation.
The outlook suggests that molybdenum prices may depend on how quickly new mine capacity reaches the market. If steel demand remains firm and mine additions lag, concentrate availability could remain a key pricing factor.
The Metalnomist Commentary
JDC’s 2025 results show a molybdenum market supported by steel demand but still constrained by feedstock discipline. The balance in 2026 will depend on whether mine capacity additions arrive fast enough to match special steel and stainless steel consumption.

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