Moil Manganese Ore Prices Rise Sharply as Indian Supply Tightens

Moil raised April manganese ore prices as tight Indian supply and restricted imports lifted feedstock costs.
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Moil Manganese Ore Prices Rise Sharply as Indian Supply Tightens
Moil

Moil manganese ore prices rose sharply for April as tight domestic availability and restricted imports pushed Indian buyers into a firmer market. State-owned Manganese Ore India increased prices across ferro-grade, silico-grade and fines material, reflecting stronger supply pressure across the domestic manganese chain.

Moil manganese ore prices for ferro-grade material with manganese content of 44% and above increased by 15% from March. Material below 44% manganese rose even more sharply, with prices up 17.5% for April.

Moil manganese ore prices also increased for 25% and 30% silico-grade ore and fines, both rising by 17.5% from March. The broad-based increase shows that tightness is affecting multiple ore grades rather than only high-grade ferro-alloy feedstock.

Domestic Ore Tightness Supports Ferro-Alloy Feedstock Prices

India manganese ore supply has become tighter as local availability remains constrained and imports face pressure from geopolitical disruptions. This has strengthened Moil’s pricing power at a time when ferro-alloy producers need reliable manganese feedstock.

Ferro-grade manganese ore is essential for ferro-manganese and silico-manganese production. These alloys are key inputs in steelmaking, where manganese improves strength, toughness and deoxidation performance.

The price increase is therefore important for Indian steel and alloy producers. Higher manganese ore costs can feed into ferro-alloy margins and eventually influence steelmaking input costs if producers cannot fully absorb the increase.

Moil Output Rose but Sales Stayed Largely Stable

Moil produced around 1.9mn t of manganese ore during the April 2025-March 2026 fiscal year, up 5.6% from the previous year. Sales volumes remained broadly stable at 1.58mn t over the same period.

The company produced around 164,000t and sold around 202,000t in March, despite supply chain constraints. This suggests that Moil maintained shipments, but broader market availability remained tight enough to support a strong April price increase.

For the Indian manganese market, the key issue is whether import constraints ease or domestic production can respond quickly. If supply remains tight, ferro-alloy producers may face continued cost pressure into the next pricing cycle.

The Metalnomist Commentary

Moil’s April price increase shows how quickly manganese ore pricing can react when domestic supply and import flows tighten together. For India’s steel value chain, manganese security is becoming more important as ferro-alloy costs remain exposed to both local mining output and global logistics risk.

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