Today's Scrap Metal Prices
in Wilson, NC, Rocky Mount, NC
Recycling in
North Carolina-12/12/13
-Great Prices
-Great Service
-Industrial and Public Welcome
-2 Digital Scales to get you in and out-FAST!
Wilson, NC is a great place to sell your scrap metal. Metal Scrap prices for Steel and Copper are up a bit this week. If you want to ready an article on what is going on with materials in the world, see below and article in China where things are getting better, as is the U.S.
Scrap metal prices could be stable over the next months, but sorry we do not know, it could even be up or down! As we have said multiple times, for items like copper, you can actually go to websites like www.cmegroup.com and watch the price of copper change every few seconds during the week. There is word that copper could slowly go down next year. Steel as many know usually changes once a month, but there is even no certainty to that.
At Wilson Metal Recycling here in North Carolina, NC, our goal remains to do our best to pay you the most for scrap metal every day. We also try to communicate the price to make it easy for you. When you call our phone number 919-828-5426 and press 2, you will hear a recording with "Today's prices" where we buy and sell scrap metal at great prices per pound. This is for:
-Steel
-Cast Iron
-Copper
-Yellow Brass
-Red Brass
-Aluminum
-Aluminum Cans
-Appliances
-Computers
-Electronics
-Junk Cars
-Salvage Cars
-Junk Cars
-Salvage Cars
-Stainless Steel
-Batteries
-and more.
We continue to have a twin focus at Raleigh Recycling
1) Public
2) Industrial/Commercial customers
1) Public
2) Industrial/Commercial customers
3) Demolition Customers
This means if you are a large Commercial, Industrial or Demolition company, you should call our Grant Kiser at 919-710-3805 to discuss prices or call me, Greg at 734-740-9514. We can give you prices for scrap metal, Cardboard, Copper, Computers and more.
An important part of our company is that we have two digital, NC State certified scales that we use to service our Industrial and Commercial Customers meaning we get you in and out fast and with accuracy!
Here at Wilson Metal Recycling J&G, importantly, we sell direct to steel mills or divisions of steel mills, not to middle men who take a commission, so we pass that savings on to you! If you want to know who buys scrap metal, call us! We are not just a junk yard or a Salvage Yard, we are Wilson recycling at its best.
Here at Wilson Metal Recycling J&G, importantly, we sell direct to steel mills or divisions of steel mills, not to middle men who take a commission, so we pass that savings on to you! If you want to know who buys scrap metal, call us! We are not just a junk yard or a Salvage Yard, we are Wilson recycling at its best.
When in Wilson, NC, Tarboro, NC and Rocky Mount, NC come see us at:
Wilson Scrap Metal Recycling
404 Maury Road
Wilson, NC, 27892
Tel 252-243 3586
www.wilsonncscrapmetalrecyclingjg.com
Wilson Scrap Metal Recycling
404 Maury Road
Wilson, NC, 27892
Tel 252-243 3586
www.wilsonncscrapmetalrecyclingjg.com
When in Raleigh, Durham, Apex, Clayton, Henderson, Oxford, Morrisville, Smithfield, Wake Forest, Burlington, Fayetteville, come see us at:
Raleigh Recycling
2310 Garner Rd.
Raleigh, NC 27610
Tel 919-828-5426
www.raleighscrapmetalrecycling.com
When in Goldsboro, LaGrange, Kinston, Mt. Olive, Smithfield, New Bern, come see us at:
Goldsboro Recycling
801 N. John St.
Goldsboro, NC 27530
Tel: 919-731-5600
When in Goldsboro, LaGrange, Kinston, Mt. Olive, Smithfield, New Bern, come see us at:
Goldsboro Recycling
801 N. John St.
Goldsboro, NC 27530
Tel: 919-731-5600
Lastly, see below. Some thoughts on the economy from a recent article about China.
If you are looking for a Wilson recycling center, come see us at Wilson Metal Recycling. We love aluminum cans, copper wire and all scrap metal!
If you are looking for a Wilson recycling center, come see us at Wilson Metal Recycling. We love aluminum cans, copper wire and all scrap metal!
Greg Brown
gbrown@wilsonncscrapmetalrecyclingjg.com
Tel 919-243-3586
gbrown@wilsonncscrapmetalrecyclingjg.com
Tel 919-243-3586
Export Surge Sets Up Big Surplus for China
By NEIL GOUGH
Published: December 8, 2013
HONG KONG — China’s exports rose more than expected last month, government figures released Sunday showed, as resurgent demand from consumers in the United States and the European Union helped put the Asian manufacturing juggernaut on track for its biggest annual trade surplus since 2008.
China’s exports of goods rose 12.7 percent in November compared with a year earlier, while imports increased 5.3 percent, resulting in a trade surplus for the month of $33.8 billion, according to data from the General Administration of Customs.
The reported export growth outpaced expectations of a 7.1 percent increase, while the increase in imports was less than the 7.2 percent economists had forecast, according to the average estimates from a survey of economists by Thomson Reuters.
Analysts said that although the yearly comparison figures were partly bolstered by companies’ over invoicing — an anomaly of Chinese trade data — the underlying export trends were encouraging.
“The year-on-year growth data overstates the actual export momentum,” Louis Kuijs, the chief China economist at the Royal Bank of Scotland in Hong Kong, wrote Sunday in a research note. “Nonetheless, there are signs that the global activity and trade cycle is gaining momentum, driven by the recovery in high-income countries, and China’s exporters are benefiting from that.”
Improving demand in the West for Chinese goods led to greater-than-expected growth in shipments to major trading partners. China’s exports to the United States rose 17.3 percent last month, while shipments to the European Union rose 18.5 percent, customs figures show.
As a result, China’s trade surplus is soaring to levels not seen in years — a development that could draw scrutiny from Western trading partners.
Dead Cat Bounce: Commodity markets reacted favorably last week on the news a budget pact was reached on a 2 year agreement that stops the threat of a government shutdown in January. In addition we saw GDP growth of 3.6% in Q3 revised from an earlier 2.8%. Consumer spending only advanced 1.4%, he weakest since the recession ended.
The Euro also helped commodities as it jumped to a 5 week high breaking out a $1.35 trading range on the news that ECB President Mario Draghi would keep interest rates at current or lower levels for “an extended period”. Here in the US payrolls rose by a seasonally adjusted 203k while the jobless rate dropped from 7.3% to 7%, mostly due to people leaving the workforce.
Starting Tuesday Fed officials go into a “blackout” period where they stop speaking publically ahead of the December 17-18 Fed policy meeting. November retail sales come out Thursday and the PPI index comes out Friday.