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TiO₂ Market ReportStablePublished 21 Nov 20252025-11-14 to 2025-11-21

TiO₂ Prices Steady, But Cost Surge Signals Potential Upswing (2025-11-14 to 2025-11-21)

Market Report

1. Titanium Dioxide (TiO₂) Market Analysis

  • China’s TiO₂ market became increasingly volatile this week as cost pressure surged and mixed signals emerged regarding production cuts and pricing intentions.
  • Rising sulfuric acid and ilmenite costs pushed TiO₂ production into deeper losses, with estimated negative margins of $210–$280/ton per ton of pigment produced.
  • Despite weak demand, major producers kept quotations firm, and some plants in Shandong and Jiangsu raised prices by $28–$42/ton due to cost pressure.
  • Meanwhile, a few producers issued small price cuts earlier in the week, reflecting the ongoing tug-of-war between cost-push pressure and declining demand.
Product Price Range (USD/MT) Change vs Last Week
Rutile-grade TiO₂ $1,830 – $1,910 No change
Anatase-grade TiO₂ $1,660 – $1,750 No change

2. Titanium Dioxide Pigment Market Trends

  • Sulfuric acid prices surged sharply again this week, driving production costs to new highs and worsening the cost imbalance for sulfate-route TiO₂ producers.
  • Ilmenite supply tightened domestically, keeping ore prices firm even as imported ilmenite weakened; this reinforced upward cost pressure.
  • With cost increases exceeding $210/ton for many producers, several plants temporarily closed order books, and top TiO₂ manufacturers introduced aggressive distributor rebate policies to stabilize the market.

3. Market Forecast

  • Cost Support: Costs for sulfuric acid and domestic ilmenite remain the strongest forces in the market, and continued increases may push more producers to attempt price hikes.
  • Price Outlook: Increased costs may lead to future production cuts or shutdowns, and potentially higher titanium dioxide prices.
  • Demand Outlook: Downstream sectors show no sign of recovery; Q4 remains the weakest demand period of the year.
  • Producer Behavior: Top manufacturers are likely to defend pricing via rebates, controlled supply, and tighter order acceptance.
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