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MORE STEEL PRICE WEAKNESS IN INDUSTRIALISED NATIONS IN FEBRUARY
There is still downward pressure on US
transaction prices, although the rate of decrease has decelerated.
Mill outages continue, with operating levels quoted at between 40
and 50 percent, depending on the facility. Deliveries are running
late because of the production constraints. Nevertheless,
distributors are keeping inventories at the lowest levels in many
years as they react to the sharp decline in end-user steel demand
caused by the economic recession.
The Canadian market remains depressed due to auto production cuts
and weak construction activity. New order intake at the steelmakers
continues to be slow, with no improvement from the poor levels of
late 2008. Both service centres and consumers are working with such
reduced inventories that they have to request rapid deliveries when
they do purchase from the mills. Distributors’ volumes are low and
profitability is declining. Although some imports are available at
figures below domestic ones, customers are loathe to commit to
offshore business.
The Chinese steel market responded quite positively to the
government’s economic stimulus package and to the plans to revive
auto, shipbuilding and machinery manufacture. These are expected to
grow demand during the first half of 2009. However, the upward price
tendency experienced over the last two to three months appears
unsustainable for now. Domestic values rose in the first few trading
days following the Chinese New Year holidays but have turned down
since then. Steel exports continue to contract and overseas sales of
manufactured goods are also declining due to the global economic
crisis.
The Japanese mills are deepening their output curbs in the face of
rapidly shrinking sales. They state that their prime task now is to
reduce stock levels. Inventories of strip mill products held by
local steelmakers and distributors, as end December, moved up by 3.1
percent, compared to November - to the highest level ever recorded.
Meanwhile, quayside stocks of imported flat products rose by 2
percent in the same time frame - the first increase since October
2008. Tokyo Steel decided to cut domestic list prices for all its
products by between ¥3000 and ¥10,000 per tonne for March contracts.
South Korea's Posco has extended its steel production cutbacks into
this month due to weakening market conditions and the need to adjust
stock levels. Flat product inventories at distributors climbed by 4
percent between November 2008 and the end of the year, reflecting
dismal demand in the auto and appliance sectors. They stabilised
during January.
Recent limitations on output have tightened supply in Taiwan,
enabling producers to hold on to prices. In mid February, CSC
announced its price intentions for April/May, which involve an
average discount of around 14 percent across all products, in
anticipation of lower raw material costs. The company usually issues
quarterly figures but, this year, June values will be advised
separately. It may be that CSC expects an upturn in the market
around that time.
The global crisis is impacting Poland. Strip mill demand is very
limited at present with no significant mill bookings to speak of,
thus causing suppliers to offer further price reductions. In the
Czech and Slovak markets, the steel sector is expected to perform
badly as long as the current economic squeeze persists. Those
producers linked to the auto industry are likely to suffer the most.
Mill prices may be at the bottom now and are expected to stay at
this low level until mid year. Any recovery in the second half is
expected to be small. Resale values are under considerable pressure
as distributors fight for the few deals available - desperate to
sell their high priced stock.
In Western Europe, market sentiment is depressed. The slightly more
positive attitude witnessed at the start of 2009 evaporated a month
later. Producers failed to achieve the first quarter price rises
they were seeking, due to continuing weak demand and a lack of any
desire on the part of customers to order ahead.
Source: MEPS - International
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