Keeping the spigot open.Despite attractive scale pricing and firm demand from mills and brokers, ferrous ferrous (fĕr`əs), iron in the +2 valence state. Containing or having to do with iron. The difference between ferrous and ferric is the number of valence electrons they contain (ferrous contains two and ferric contains three), which dealers may not be able to stave off stave n. 1. A narrow strip of wood forming part of the sides of a barrel, tub, or similar structure. 2. A rung of a ladder or chair. 3. A staff or cudgel. 4. Music See staff1. the start of a seasonal slowdown in their material flow. A mid-November dose of winter weather that hit a few major cities in the Great Lakes region The Great Lakes region can refer to:
Hiccups are the result of an involuntary, spasmodic contraction of the diaphragm followed by the closing of the throat. Description begin affecting business in northern climates. Beyond the anticipated snowstorms, factors including the onset of hunting season (in some states) and the Thanksgiving holiday as a signal for contractors to put away their outdoor equipment for the winter have begun affecting flows of scrap from that sector. Similarly, the manufacturing sector is entering a period of overall seasonal decline, when some customers will shut down altogether for a week or more and others will be affected by workforce vacations that will cut into production. If pricing remains high, some dealers are optimistic op·ti·mist n. 1. One who usually expects a favorable outcome. 2. A believer in philosophical optimism. op that scrap will continue to find its way into their yards in the winter months, although there are concerns that the high scale prices of the past three years have drawn down significant portions of the scrap reservoir. Scrap availability is one of several factors that could keep ferrous pricing on its "roller coaster What a bad CD-R disc is often called. See CD-R and underrun. ride," as one dealer described the 2005 market. The year has witnessed months with $50 or greater price swings, creating a market where "$15 and $20 swings seem almost sideways," in the words of another dealer. In the longer-term, dealers are nervous about portions of the North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. manufacturing sector, such as more production cuts and shifts anticipated by General Motors and Ford Motor Co. and their suppliers. But the gloom is not across the spectrum, as some dealers have been encouraged by the stability of the levels of industrial scrap that have flowed into their yards in 2005. The demolition and construction sectors have also been healthy sources of scrap throughout the year. Scrap that is making it into the yard is able to flow in all of its traditional directions now, as many of the summer and early fall woes that affected the inland waterway waterway, natural or artificial navigable inland body of water, or system of interconnected bodies of water, used for transportation, may include a lake, river, canal, or any combination of these. system were cleared up before any winter freezing occurred. The Port of New Orleans The Port of New Orleans is a port located in New Orleans, Louisiana. It is the 5th largest port in the United States based on volume of cargo handled, second-largest in the state after the Port of South Louisiana, and 12th largest in the U.S. based on value of cargo. is active again, with scrap barges again able to navigate the Mississippi and its tributaries after turmoil caused by factors ranging from drought, hurricanes and then a shortage of vessels. On the sell side, market watchers are carefully listening to news from China, where steel prices have fallen in November, causing speculation that the nation's steelmaking sector is finally producing at a rate that is outpacing its economy's ability to consume steel. Such a circumstance, when it occurs, is labeled by many as a factor that can cause the ferrous scrap market to head back down toward pricing levels that were more typical before the 2003-2005 market boom. [GRAPHIC OMITTED] (Additional news about ferrous scrap, including breaking news and consuming industry reports, is available online at www Recycling Today.com.) |
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