Showing posts with label Clayton. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Clayton. Show all posts

Saturday, October 3, 2015

Junk Car for cash, Junk Car Removal, Junk Car Towing, Junk Car Pick up, Raleigh Metal Recycling, NC, Junk Yard

Junk Car for Cash
Junk Car Removal
Junk Car Towing
Junk Car Pick up

Salvage Cars-Raleigh Junk Yard
Junk Cars-Raleigh Metal Recycling
Junk cars are a big part of what we do.
 
Drive it in!
Raleigh Metal Recycling
2310 Garner Road,
Raleigh, NC 27610
919-828-5426
CASH ON THE SPOT
 
Towing-Pick Up
Call Dave at : 919-758-3764
Any condition
Working NOT working
Pick up 4 hours or Less
CASH ON THE SPOT
 
Greg Brown
919-828-5426
 
 
 


Wednesday, April 29, 2015

Raleigh Metal Recycling-Free Friday Cash! Recycle Copper, Aluminum and more, for great prices per pound

Free Friday Cash
Raleigh Metal Recycling
2310 Garner Road
Raleigh, NC 27610
919-828-5426
4/24/15
 
 
Congratulations to Gustavo Lopez for being the winner of last week's Cash drawing.  Come by and get your Cash and of course bring us more scrap metal!
 
Greg Brown
gbrown@raleighscrapmetalrecycling.com
919-828-5426
 
 
Appliance Pick Up in Raleigh, NC
 
 
Junk My Car, Towing, Removal

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

Old Appliance Recycling and Disposal, Refrigerators, Washers, Dryers, Raleigh , NC, Cary, Durham, 27610

Raleigh Metal Recycling
2310 Garner Road
Raleigh, NC 27610
919-828-5426
Appliance Recycle
Recycling Appliances
Appliance Pick Up
Appliance Disposal
Appliance Recycling Center
Refrigerator Recycling
Washers, Dryers, Refrigerators
1/13/2015
Old refrigerator not working? Is a handyman quoting you at several hundred dollars to simply replace a bad compressor?

Bring it to us for Cash!  Refrigerators, Washers and Dryers

OR

Pick-Up your old appliance!
Call Kenny at 919-348-0545 for Old Appliance Removal and Disposal!  The best in Appliance Pick up!

Protect the wallet and don't waste your money on something that might well break again, especially if we're talkin' about a fridge from the '90s! Instead, haul your load to 2310 Garner Rd., Raleigh, NC, just south of Downtown Raleigh, NC, 27610 and get some money for that dilapidated appliance, whether it be an old refrigerator, microwave, freezer, dishwasher, dryer, washing machine, ice chest, or some other metal appliance, even if there's some plastic or glass on it. A great place to dispose of appliances.  You can get rid of appliances six days a week at Raleigh Recycling!  We are great at Appliance Recycling.  We'll have you in and out, and our process is designed to make getting paid for doing some scrap metal recycling in the great state of North Carolina more efficient, exhilarating, rewarding, than ever before!  Remember, you can come from Cary, NC, Durham, Clayton and Wake Forest to drop off your old refrigerator, too! We're not too far away from either of those places!
To get around expensive repair costs, when it comes right down to it, buying a new or slightly used appliance is oftentimes the best choice a consumer can make. Getting an extra $20 or $30 for scrapping that old refrigerator makes a lot of sense in such a case.

All you have to do is haul that old fridge down to 2310 Garner Rd., near Downtown Raleigh, NC, 27610 and VOILA! Go around the left corner of the building.

Raleigh Metal Recycling, www.raleighscrapmetalrecycling.com
Old Appliance Recycling, Refrigerators, Washers, Raleigh Metal Recycling 919-828-5426

NC Scrap metal Recycling for Today's Current prices, copper, aluminum
Raleigh Scrap Metal Recycling www.raleighscrapmetalrecycling, Junk Yard
You'll see the truck scales right in front of you. Go onto the scale that's closest to the building, and drive up to the second scale booth that will be on your left. One of our scale masters will inform you of all you need to keep in mind upon driving into the yard to do some good 'ole fashioned scrap recycling!  Raleigh Scrap Metal Recycling.  We have great scrap metal prices!  We are not just a Junk Yard or Salvage Yard, we are Raleigh Metal Recycling at its Best!

 

An old refrigerator isn't the only thing you can bring us!

And also, perhaps you'd like to bring in some steel, too, since that old refrigerator might be lonesome in the back of the pickup. Pieces of steel make for great items to bring through our truck scales, too. We buy loads of prepared steel, i.e., steel that's less than 3 feet by 2 feet that have no non-metals attached to them, for $0.25 more per hundred pounds than the bigger steel pieces (unprepared steel (3'x2' or greater in size)).
So, though we're certainly an appliance recycler, we help the environment and our customers by processing many other metal objects as well. Examples are aluminum cans and rims, motors, brass doorknobs, sheet copper, even junk cars!
We welcome any questions you might have about our operation; therefore, by all means, put 919-828-5426 into your phone so we can talk recycling sometime!

Greg Brown
919-828-5426
gbrown@raleighscrapmetalrecycling.com
www.raleighscrapmetalrecycling.com

Links
Appliance Pick Up Removal

Appliance Recycling

Friday, November 28, 2014

Raleigh, NC, Today's Scrap Metal Recycling Current Prices for Steel, Junk Cars, Copper and Aluminum, per pound, Salavge Yard, Junk Yard

Today's Scrap Metal Prices
in Raleigh, NC, Durham, Cary, Garner
North Carolina-11/29/14


 
-Great Prices
-Great Service
-Industrial and Public Welcome
-11 Digital Scales to get you in and out fast!
-Junk Cars-We TOW, or you Drive in, or Tow in
 
Today's scrap metal prices are in flux.  Copper has hit a 4+ year low on world markets, so we have had to reduce our price.  It may still go lower.  See the below two articles on copper.  Steel last month hit a 3 year low last month.  We have heard steel may have bottomed out, so we actually raised prices this week on steel and Junk Cars!
 
We continue 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".  This is for:
 
-Steel
-Cast Iron
-Copper
-Yellow Brass
-Red Brass
-Aluminum
-Aluminum Cans
-Appliances
-Computers
-Electronics
-Junk Cars
-Salvage Cars
-Stainless Steel
-Batteries
-and more.
We continue to have a twin focus for our business,
1) Public
2) Industrial/Demolition customers. 

This means if you are a large Commercial or Industrial company, you should call 919-828-5426 to discuss prices.  We can give you prices for scrap metal, Cardboard, Copper, Computers and more.

 

An important part of our company is that we have 11 digital, NC State certified scales that we use to service our Industrial and Commercial Customers.  Almost double our closest competitor, meaning we get you in and out fast and with accuracy!  

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!



JUNK CARS, Salvage Cars

1) WE TOW-JUNK CAR-JUNK CAR REMOVAL
-Get Cash on the spot
-Any condition, running or not running
-Keys or no keys, engine or no engine
-Call 919-758-3764 for JUNK CAR REMOVAL!

2) Drive it in, or you tow it in!
-Get Cash on the spot
-Any condition
-In and out fast!
Come to us at:
 
Raleigh Metal Recycling
2310 Garner Road
Raleigh, NC 27610


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, Wilson, Kinston, Mt. Olive, Smithfield, New Bern, come see us at:

Goldsboro Recycling
801 N. John St.
Goldsboro, NC 27530

Tel: 919-731-5600


www.goldsboroscrapmetalrecycling.com

Greg Brown
gbrown@raleighscrapmetalrecycling.com
Tel 919-828-5426

 
Today's Scrap Metal Prices

Roll off trailers, Scrap Metal, Gondola Trailers for Sale

The 2015 Metals Outlook Series: Copper


Editorial

Scrap Metal in Raleigh, Durham, Apex, Morrisville, Garner, Clayton
Raleigh Metal Recycling, NC Copper 919-828-5426


Copper mining is a dying industry, having passed the point of maturity it is now in decline.
While there is extremely moderate growth predicted in the next five years, the world price of copper is forecast to steadily decline.
The future is not bright for this crucial metal, even as demand slowly increases.
According to a BHP Billiton presentation and recent United Nations data, demand for the metal will increase as many third and second world nations develop, creating long term drivers with increased consumption as they build their infrastructure.
This in part is due to the massive shift society is seeing, precipitating a decline in rural populations to greater urbanisation and in turn economic development.
With the global population currently standing at more than 7.1 billion it is almost evenly split 50/50, however "the urban population is expected to grow globally from 3.6 billion (as of 2010) to 4.3 billion (in 2020) and to 5 billion in 2030," the UN data stated, eventually accounting for 60 per cent of the world's total population.
Unicef reports that by 2050 around 70 per cent of the world will live in cities.
Australia will also be one of the most urban nations in the world, with 94 per cent of people living in cities or metropolitan areas.
China and India alone will have cities with more than a billion people living in them.
In the meantime the rural population is predicted to remain flat at around 3.5 billion for the next three decades.
As part of this massive shift towards urban centres commodity demand is forecast to grow in line.

Copper scrap, wire, great prices per pound for copper wire
Copper Mine-Raleigh Metal Recycling, NC 919-828-5426
These people will need to build, power, and run their cities, and copper will be the metal that will allow them to do so.
According to BHP "Chinese copper intensity doubles from rural (less than 500 000 people) to smallest urban centres; and more than triples from rural to large urban centres".
It is proven that demand evolves with economic development, although "copper [does] plateau later in the industrialisation cycle" both "China and India are still in the early stages of development".
In explicit terms, the total demand for semi-fabricated products is expected to grow at three per cent compound annual growth rate (CAGR) over the coming decade, with the primary drivers China and India sitting at five and ten per cent CAGR respectively.
While average industry copper grade percentages remained fair-ly consist in process feed from 1980 to 1998, they have been on a sharp downward slope that looks to get only worse.
High grades, high quantity mines such as Escondida, Grasberg, Bingham, Olympic Dam, Prominent Hill, Northpakes, Cadia or Ernest Henry are unlikely to be on the cards again.
"Due to these declining grades the average run of mine (ROM) grades for copper have actually fallen by three quarters to less than one per cent, yet at the same time annual supply increased from under one million tonnes to more than 16 million tonnes," BHP CEO Andrew Mackenzie said.
According to a Wood Mackenzie report from 2012 "copper grades have declined at an average rate of 2.8 per cent per annum over the last decade".
It went on to state that at current production rates the quality will continue to decline due to the depletion of existing resources and these lower grade ores.
As Wood Mackenzie points out: "New discoveries have not been able to reverse the long term trend [of decline]".
This, coupled with BHP's Andrew Mackenzie's comments on grades, projects a bleak future.
And while there is likely to be a short term spike as long awaited projects come online, in the longer term the forecast resource depletion means that a new, and currently unknown supply is needed.
The only likely saviour, in terms of Australian producers, is a weak Australian dollar, which will push up revenues despite prices remaining fairly flat.

Copper mine, Raleigh Metal Recycling
Copper Facility Raleigh Metal Recycling
According to IBISWorld re-search "industry revenue is fore-cast to grow at an annualised rate of 1.5 per cent over the next five years to US$7.1 billion in 2019/20".
"This reflects the combination of higher output levels, a weaker Australian dollar and higher US dollar prices.
"If the Australian dollar de-preciates against the US dollar, export demand increases and contracts will earn domestic players more revenue."
Speaking to BNP Paribas managing director energy and natural resources - investment banking Asia Pacific, David McCombe, he explained in the short term "copper will be coming off over 2015 through to 2017, but it will be moving up again to the back end of 2017."
Much of this is due to the "current imbalance because of higher supply, as there is around 23 million tonnes of supply but only about 22 million tonnes of demand".
"This will not be a massive move down, but this oversupply will hurt for some time."
ANZ head of economics corporate and commercial, Justin Fabo, added that "copper looks vulnerable enough to slip back through the US$7000 per tonne mark as we approach the normally quiet northern hemisphere summer".
"Operating rates at copper tube and pipe fabricators fell below 80 per cent mid-year, an indication that end-user demand is weak; we would be positioned for some further downside in the short-term."
However IBISWorld added "increased output [will] more than offset lower Australian dollar copper prices".
Looking beyond this period Wood Mackenzie estimates a price of US$300 per pound by 2020 and beyond while analysts polled by Consensus Forecast expect an average of US$291.8 per pound for 2018 through to 2022.
In terms of revenue for the industry growth rates are set to slow progressively over the next few years before entering into a brief period of decline in 2017/18, before returning to minimal growth in the next period. 



Copper falls to 8-mth low, slump in oil prices drags commodities – ASIA METALS



Base metals were mostly lower during Friday’s Asian trade, with the copper price falling below $6,500 per tonne at one point. Oil prices plunged after OPEC decided not to cut its production at a meeting yesterday, dragging the overall commodity complex with it. 

Oil prices plunged after OPEC decided not to cut production at its meeting yesterday, leaving its 30 million barrels a day (mbpd) production limit unchanged.  Brent crude oil subsequently slumped to a low of $72.78 per barrel, its cheapest since August 2010, while WTI hit $69.44, its lowest since June 2010. 

The fall in oil prices dampened sentiments in the commodities market, with gold falling to the current $1,184.60 per ounce. 

General sentiment surrounding metals is still weighed to the downside - a solid recovery is needed for any serious moves to take place. As well as the struggling eurozone and China, where interest rates were cut last week, there are signs that the US economy is stuttering now. 

Today also marks the end of the month, so there may well be an upsurge in booksquaring and positioning activity towards the close. Next week sees December traded options declared on Wednesday. 

In the metals, copper was quoted last at $6,514 per tonne, down $36 on yesterday’s close. Earlier this morning, it fell briefly below $6,500 to an eight-month low of $6,484.25 per tonne. In spreads, the benchmark cash/three-months was last showing a backwardation of $57.50. 

“I guess its oil dragging all the commodities down, other than that, the Chinese are still happy to short copper,” said a Singapore-based trader. 

Aluminium fell just $3 in price; the light metal has held up pretty steadily with widening spreads. Cash/threes are now at $31 backwardation, up from $25 on Thursday. Yesterday, inventories fell 10,025 tonnes to 4,332,400 tonnes, the lowest now since January 2011. 

In other metals, nickel was $68 lower at $16,355. Stocks were up 1,854 tonnes at a new all-time peak of 401,850 tonnes and cancelled warrants rose 2,508 tonnes to 97,530 tonnes. 

Zinc at $2,256 is flat while lead at $2,051 is $9 lower in price. Tin was last quoted at $20,220, $30 lower but no trades has been done yet.
- See more at: http://www.fastmarkets.com/base-metals-news/asia-metals-copper-falls-to-8-mth-low-slump-oil-prices-drags-commodities-85888#sthash.wbobTdRO.dpuf


 


Read more at http://www.ferret.com.au/articles/in-focus/the-2015-metals-outlook-series-copper-n2519384#1ziMIUgO5cMSEsA5.99

Wednesday, November 19, 2014

Today's Raleigh Scrap Metal (and Junk Cars), Prices per pound for Steel, Copper, Aluminum. Call 919-828-5426, Salvage Junk Yard, Appliances, Recycling

Raleigh, NC 
Scrap Metal Recycling
Copper Scrap Prices per Pound
Raleigh Metal Recycling
Aluminum Cans, Batteries, Appliances
2310 Garner Road
Raleigh, NC, 27610
919-828-5426

Scrap Metal Recycling in Cary, NC, Durham, NC, Garner, NC 919-828-5426
Copper Scrap Metal Raleigh Metal Recycling

Copper scrap metal and Steel prices are steady this week. At Raleigh Metal Recycling we always work hard to find the best places to sell our scrap metal, so we can offer you the best prices. While there remains lower growth coming from China and Europe, the U.S. is doing OK so prices are up a bit.  It is a strange dynamic in that due to the U.S. doing well, the U.S. dollar is strong, so U.S. steel mills are finding it lower cost to buy scrap metal in Europe, vs. Raleigh, NC.
 
Commodity prices are dropping all over.  See the below from the New York Times

We are the largest Metal Recycling operation in Raleigh, NC, and with our ATMs, we pay cash for copper and get you in and out fast with our totally computerized buying process.  

Greg Brown
919-828-5426
gbrown@raleighscrapmetalrecycling.com

Links


Copper Recycling, sell scrap copper for Cash
Photo


Commodity prices have fallen nearly 15 percent since late June. CreditMonica Almeida/The New York Times

Continue reading the main storyShare This Page
For many consumers and businesses the recent drop in commodity prices has provided a tidy windfall — one analyst estimated that the typical American household would save $400 a year thanks to lower gasoline prices. But the tumbling price of fuels, metals and other commodities is also sending a warning about the global economy.
Over all, commodity prices have fallen nearly 15 percent since late June, according to a Bloomberg index. Last week, the price of crude oil dropped to a four-year low, about $74 a barrel, down from about $107 a barrel in June. The prices of metals like copper, platinum and silver have also fallen sharply since the summer.
The decline can partly be explained by economic changes taking place in China. In the last two decades, the country has been gobbling up the world’s coal, iron ore, copper, oil and other commodities to build new cities and fuel its booming economy, which grew at an average pace of nearly 10 percent a year for three decades. But that growth rate has now slowed, and with it China’s demand for raw materials. This year, the country will grow at 7.4 percent, according to the International Monetary Fund.
The world had anticipated China’s economic transition, but it was much less prepared for stagnation in Japan and in much of Europe.
In Japan, a sharp increase in a sales tax earlier this year has hurt consumer spending. And Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has largely failed to boost business investment and draw more women into the labor force, two changes he had promised as part of a plan to revive his country’s weakened economy. The Bank of Japan recently expanded its bond-buying program, but bigger government policy changes will be needed to revive Japan’s economy in 2015.
In Europe, government officials and central bankers in the 18-country eurozone have been slow and timid in boosting their economies, even though inflation is less than 0.5 percent and the unemployment rate is more than 11 percent. The European Central Bank should be buying government bonds to pump more money into the economy, a policy known as quantitative easing. But it has been reluctant to do so because German officials are opposed to the policy, which they think would serve to transfer wealth from strong euro nations to weaker ones. It should come as no surprise that the eurozone grew at just 0.2 percent in the third quarter of this year, according to data released on Friday.

The big losers in all this are nations that depend on commodity exports, like Russia, Brazil and Iran. Some of these countries, particularly Russia and Iran, already have substantial economic problems because of Western sanctions and government mismanagement. Brazil’s economy was slowingbefore the decline in commodity prices, and it faces a difficult 2015. President Dilma Rousseff, who recently was re-elected by a narrow margin, needs to diversify Brazil’s economy by investing in infrastructure and making it easier for entrepreneurs to start businesses.
The drop in prices, however, has been good for the United States, which is growing faster than other industrialized economies. Lower oil prices in particular will provide a much needed stimulus to consumers, particularly lower-income Americans who spend a larger percentage of their incomes on fuel; analysts say cheaper fuel has helped raise retail sales in the United States.
But America’s economy could struggle in the coming year if Europe and Japan slip into another recession. About 25 percent of all American exportswent to those two markets in the first nine months of the year.
The economic recovery from the financial crisis was uneven and disappointing. Now, in many countries, it is stalling.