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ASIAN
STEEL PRICES RALLY TO KEEP GLOBAL FIGURES STEADY
Customers' inventories are said to be lower
now in Canada. Imports are minimal. Once the seasonal downturn is
over, local producers expect to see a pick up in demand, although
distributors report slow activity levels. However, delivery lead
times remain short with some mills still willing to do deals in
order to keep their operations busy.
We have noted a complete reversal of the
price tendency in China over the Summer. Domestic values are escalating
sharply. Tight supply, together with high raw material costs, are
triggering the increases. Maintenance work planned by several major
mills is likely to cause further restrictions on output.
Inventories of strip mill products continue
to climb in Japan. Total domestic stocks of coil held by steelmakers
and service centres, at end July, grew by 3.3 percent from the previous
month. However, prices are expected to rise, due to a reduction
in imports. Quayside inventories fell by 1 percent in the same time
frame.
Some prices have started to move up in South
Korea, where we can detect signs of strengthening demand. In Taiwan,
CSC is to give priority to meeting brisk consumption in the home
market. Thus, shipments to Japan will be cut sharply in the fourth
quarter. As expected, the company will keep official domestic strip
mill prices for period four unchanged.
Polish values have slipped over the quiet
holiday period. Mittal Steel Poland will roll over the September
figures for October business. So far, there is no visible pick up
in sales. Distributors' inventories are at a very high point and
are not being replenished at present. Nevertheless, the longer term
outlook remains good. Czech/Slovak producers are busy. Order intake
is sound and mill stocks are normal. Imports are not disruptive.
Generally, customers prefer to buy domestic material. Export business
remains profitable.
Activity is slowly returning to the EU market
after the dormant Summer holiday period. The quantities of imported
strip mill products arriving in Southern Europe dropped in August.
Customers are expecting import price offers to be higher during
the Autumn because of an anticipated decline in availability from
China and a need to recover escalating raw material costs. Nevertheless,
some local prices have slipped during the vacation - this is particularly
true for the coated products. EU producers still appear undecided
regarding period four pricing.
Source: MEPS - International
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