India Manganese Alloy Prices Fall as Supply Glut Meets Weak Demand

India manganese alloy prices fall as weak demand, excess supply and CBAM pressure hit exports.
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India Manganese Alloy Prices Fall as Supply Glut Meets Weak Demand
Manganese alloy

India manganese alloy prices declined as muted demand, excess supply and cautious buying weighed on the bulk alloys market. Ferro-manganese and silico-manganese both moved lower, while ferro-chrome and ferro-silicon prices remained broadly stable.

India manganese alloy prices are under pressure from a widening mismatch between production and consumption. Weak stainless steel demand, limited export bookings and inventory overhangs have reduced market momentum.

India manganese alloy prices are also being affected by liquidity pressure among producers. Some suppliers lowered offers toward the end of the month to generate cash flow, adding further downside pressure.

The broader market remains uneven. Ferro-chrome is supported by long-term export commitments, while ferro-silicon is supported by limited availability. Manganese alloys, however, face weaker domestic and overseas demand.

Ferro-Manganese and Silico-Manganese Weaken on Inventory Pressure

Ferro-manganese prices fell as domestic demand remained insufficient to absorb available supply. The 70% ferro-manganese price declined to Rs83,000-85,000/t ex-works, while 75% material fell to Rs90,000-92,000/t.

Higher manganese ore costs continue to provide some support. This is why ferro-manganese prices are expected to remain above silico-manganese, despite weak buying and limited spot activity.

However, the domestic market is still struggling with excess supply. Producers are competing for limited orders, and some have cut prices to maintain liquidity.

Silico-manganese prices also moved lower. Indian 60% silico-manganese fell to Rs82,500-83,500/t ex-works, with market activity described as extremely limited.

Price recovery will be difficult until inventories are absorbed. Buyers remain cautious and are delaying purchases because they expect further corrections.

Export prices also weakened. The 60% silico-manganese export price fell to $890-900/t fob east coast, while 65% material declined to $960-980/t fob.

Overseas buying slowed as higher offer levels discouraged bookings. Middle East enquiries halted because of geopolitical tensions, while European demand weakened under quota restrictions.

CBAM certification is adding another pressure point. European buyers are increasingly demanding carbon documentation for high-carbon manganese alloys, raising compliance costs and complicating Indian export sales.

Ferro-Chrome and Ferro-Silicon Hold Steady Despite Weak Sentiment

Ferro-chrome prices remained stable even as downstream demand stayed subdued. High-carbon 60% ferro-chrome held at Rs117,000-119,000/t ex-works.

Domestic producers continued fulfilling long-term export commitments. This helped keep the market steady despite weaker bids in OMC’s chrome ore auction.

The fall in auction bids reflected softer consumer demand. However, ferro-chrome did not face the same immediate inventory and liquidity pressure seen in manganese alloys.

Ferro-silicon prices also held steady. The 70% ferro-silicon price remained at Rs108,000-110,000/t ex-works, supported by limited availability and firm demand.

The difference between ferro-silicon and manganese alloys shows how supply balance is driving price direction. Ferro-silicon has tighter availability, while manganese alloys face surplus material and weaker offtake.

For Indian bulk alloys, export conditions remain critical. Domestic demand alone may not be enough to absorb production if overseas buying stays weak.

The European market will also become more difficult for high-carbon alloys. CBAM compliance, quota restrictions and weak steel consumption could keep Indian exporters under pressure.

The Metalnomist Commentary

India’s manganese alloy market is not facing a raw material problem alone; it is facing a demand absorption problem. Until excess inventories clear and export demand improves, ore cost support will only slow the decline rather than reverse it.

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