Ben Weitsman of New Castle opens in Pennsylvania
Upstate Shredding – Weitsman Recycling, headquartered in Owego, New York, opened its Ben Weitsman of New Castle location in early May in Pennsylvania.
The company constructed all new buildings, equipped the facility with new equipment and fully paved and landscaped the entire yard in New Castle. The opening occurs after demolition of the old Ferrotech buildings at the site and construction of the new shredder, full nonferrous downstream system and retail scrap metal recycling facility.
The 3,000-horsepower shredder from Wendt Corp., Buffalo, New York, was originally slated to go online two years ago, but the project encountered permitting delays, according to American Metal Market.
“The outpouring of support and excitement regarding our new Ben Weitsman of New Castle facility has been nothing short of amazing,” says Adam Weitsman, CEO of Upstate Shredding – Weitsman Recycling.
As the site of the company’s first shredder outside of its flagship facility in Owego, Upstate says the New Castle location provides it with access to new scrap markets.
LME reports ferrous scrap trading activity
The London Metal Exchange (LME) says the first voice-brokered trade of its LME Steel Scrap contract was executed May 4, 2016, by INTL FCStone Ltd. on behalf of steel distributor Stemcor, United Kingdom.
The additions to the LME’s ferrous products, LME Steel Scrap and LME Steel Rebar, “have seen considerable support from the market since their launch in November 2015,” the LME says. On the scrap contract, 35,990 metric tons (3,599 lots) have been traded, and, on the rebar contract, some 9,600 metric tons (960 lots) of steel have been traded. A new single-trade record of 1,000 metric tons (100 lots) of scrap was set in the May 4 voice-brokered trade. The new cash-settled futures contracts can be traded monthly out to 15 months and have a lot size of 10 metric tons.
“Real industry prefers to hedge through trades quoted over the phone by their brokers, so this first voice-brokered trade shows these contracts are being accepted as risk management tools for the steel industry,” says Matthew Chamberlain, head of business development at the LME.
Market open interest has been steadily growing and bid/offer spreads have been as tight as 50 cents, according to the LME. It says its market-making programs “have ensured that tradable prices for the contracts have been displayed since their launch and, for the first time ever, the global industry now has a 12-month tradable forward curve for both products.”
Phillip Price, head of market risk management and derivatives trading at Stemcor, comments, “The LME’s steel contracts are already developing sufficient liquidity to facilitate effective hedging of physical business, and we are very excited about the prospect for further growth. Based on the development so far we feel these launches have been the most successful in the commodities space since iron ore swaps.”
Spencer Johnson, global ferrous risk manager at INTL FCStone Ltd., says, “The LME’s collaborative approach to product development in the ferrous market has proven effective. INTL FCStone Ltd. has seen increasing demand from our clients to trade these new contracts and we are happy to provide this additional service.”
Explore the July 2016 Issue
Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read.
Latest from Recycling Today
- ReElement, Posco partner to develop rare earth, magnet supply chain
- Comau to take part in EU’s Reinforce project
- Sustainable packaging: How do we get there?
- ReMA accepts Lifetime Achievement nominations
- ExxonMobil will add to chemical recycling capacity
- ESAB unveils new cutting torch models
- Celsa UK assets sold to Czech investment fund
- EPA releases ‘National Strategy to Prevent Plastic Pollution’