Correction to aluminium scrap, old sheet (Taint/Tabor), cut sheared, 5-8% attachments, cif India

Fastmarkets has corrected its MB-AL-0399 aluminium scrap, old sheet (Taint/Tabor), cut sheared, 5-8% attachments, cif India price assessment, which was published incorrectly on Wednesday November 20.

The price range for the November 20 MB-AL-0399 aluminium scrap, old sheet (Taint/Tabor), cut sheared, 5-8% attachments, cif India assessment has been amended to $1,850-1,900 per tonne from $1,800-1,900 per tonne. Fastmarkets’ pricing database has been updated to reflect this change.

This price is part of Fastmarkets’ scrap package.

To provide feedback on this price or if you would like to provide price information by becoming a data submitter to this price, please contact Aameer Sayed by email at: pricing@fastmarkets.com. Please add the subject heading “FAO: Aameer Sayed, re CIF India aluminium scrap prices.”

Please indicate if comments are confidential. Fastmarkets will consider all comments received and will make comments not marked as confidential available upon request.

To see all Fastmarkets pricing methodology and specification documents, go to https://www.fastmarkets.com/methodology.

What to read next
Fastmarkets has corrected its FP-PP-0002 polypropylene polymer, fiber grade, free delivered Europe, €/kg assessment, which was published incorrectly on July 1 due to a typo.
Fastmarkets has corrected its assessment for AG-CRN-0077 Corn FOB US PNW $/mt, published incorrectly on June 24 due to a procedural error.
Fastmarkets has launched a new iron ore blast-furnace (BF)-pellet quarterly contract premium and a monthly premium indicator for the European market, effective July 1, 2026.
Fastmarkets proposes to narrow the optimized range for MB-IRO-0020 iron ore fines, % Si VIU, cfr Qingdao, $/dmt, effective from August 3.
North American EV demand is slowing with BEV adoption declining while hybrid vehicle sales gain momentum, prompting automakers to reset strategies amid policy shifts and trade pressures.
India's drive toward 300 million tonnes per year of steelmaking capacity by 2030 is on track from a capacity standpoint, but panellists at Fastmarkets' Iron Ore Decoded 2026 conference said the country's domestic iron ore base is likely to fall short of supporting that growth.