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The US vitamin C market rebounded in early March after a quiet late February, as spot buying improved with first-quarter immune-health demand and stable export supply from Chinese glucose-fermentation centers. Although Chinese producers maintained normal operating rates and adequate output, higher trans-Pacific freight costs increased landed-cost calculations, keeping suppliers cautious. Buyers therefore favored requirement-based purchasing rather than aggressive stock-building, while inventories remained sufficient for short-term needs. Demand was uneven across end-use sectors: beverage fortification led growth with strong year-on-year blending volumes, supporting firmer offtake, while nutraceutical, feed, cosmetic, and pharmaceutical segments stayed comparatively softer or routine. Exporters also lifted quotations in response to war-related market sentiment and freight increases, adding further cost pressure. Analysts expect modest upward price momentum in the coming months as seasonal supplement demand persists. Looking ahead, geopolitical tensions involving the United States, Israel, and Iran may further elevate crude oil prices, increasing freight, energy, and marine insurance costs, which could sustain upward pressure despite comfortable supply availability.
Vitamin C prices in the US moved upward through early to mid-March, supported by a recovery in spot-market activity after subdued trading in late February. Market participants linked the price increase of Vitamin C to the usual first-quarter rise in immune-health related purchasing, while export supply from Chinese fermentation hubs remained steady as glucose-based plants continued operating at normal rates. Despite adequate Vitamin C availability, elevated trans-Pacific freight charges tightened landed-cost calculations for US Vitamin C importers and distributors. Vitamin C buyers, therefore, maintained requirement-based procurement rather than large-scale forward stocking, keeping supply pipelines balanced but sensitive to short-term price shifts. Exporters also raised quotations for Vitamin C in response to higher freight costs and war-related market sentiment, which further increased landed costs for US suppliers. Combined, seasonal demand, logistics pressure, and geopolitical uncertainty contributed to firmer Vitamin C pricing by mid-March, even though global supply availability remained...
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