|
GLOBAL STEEL MARKET ROUNDUP FROM MEPS
Following further sustained upward momentum, US flat
product transaction values may be nearing their peak. Supply limitations, partly
due to mill capacity cuts, supplemented by scrap shortages and the surging costs
of other raw materials, have pushed prices up remarkably quickly over recent
months. However, real demand has not improved significantly enough to support
such massive increases and customers are now questioning how long these levels
can be maintained.
After the extended New Year celebrations, Chinese values resumed their sharp
upward trend. Recently, however, they have come under negative pressure as it
became clear that activity was soft. Nevertheless, a number of leading producers
have elected to lift their official March ex-works figures as they strive to
pass on their higher costs for iron ore and coking coal.
Demand for flat products is firm in Japan. The steelmakers, claiming surging
outlay on raw materials, have implemented further price hikes. For the moment,
distributors are recouping the rises from their customers. In South Korea,
subdued sale volumes are making it difficult for the mills to implement
increases. Posco is reluctant to try to recover growing raw material costs by
means of domestic hikes in period one.
In western Europe, buyers are anticipating more increases in the second quarter
as the mills make some upward adjustments in line with the positive momentum in
raw materials. Rolling schedules are currently full because of the restocking
exercise that started in December ahead of price rises. Third country offers are
still not competitive but may start to look more attractive if the proposed
hikes are maintained.
Source: MEPS - International
Steel Review - click
here for a free sample copy.
Purchase
the latest copy of International Steel Review here
|
Sign
up for free MEPS steel news alerts
|
|
|