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30 Dec 2008
The steel business faces its biggest hurdle in 60 years with some analysts predicting double digit production cuts in 2009. Now, a sudden change in China trade policy may spell even more trouble for Western steelmakers, as Beijing is currently considering measures to shore up its ailing steel industry with new export policies.
According to World Steel Dynamics, a U.S. steel consulting firm, steel
production could fall next year by 13.9% compared with this year. This
downturn comes after a long period of growth in the steel industry. In
fact, output has grown every year since 1998 - soaring from 777 million
metric tons a decade ago to 1.34 billion metric tons in 2007.
The catalyst behind the expansion has been a robust world economy and a
steep rise in demand in China - by far the world’s biggest steel
producing and consuming nation, accounting for more than a third of
global steel output.
But the sector has been among those worst hit by this year’s financial
storms, with share prices in many steel companies having fallen by more
than two-thirds since the middle of 2008.
“The reduction in demand we’ve seen in steel goes beyond typical
cyclical downturns given the level of distress in global financial
markets and tight credit conditions,” Carol Cowan, a U.S.-based analyst
at Moody’s Corp.(MCO) credit rating agency, told the Financial Times.
Steel companies’ share prices have been hit hard. Severstal OAO,
Russia’s biggest steelmaker, has seen its shares fall almost 90% since
July, ArcelorMittal (MT) has dropped more than 70 per cent; and United
States Steel Corp. (X), the United States’ biggest steel company is
down 79% over the same period.
Meanwhile, China’s steel industry, the world’s largest, is sitting on a
stockpile of 63 million metric tons, or about 13% of annual production.
Baosteel Group Corp. General Manager He Wenbo said in November that his
company was facing the “most difficult” period since it was founded 30
years ago.
But China is making noise about a shift in trade policy meant to
rekindle its steel mills and keep its economy humming. The government
is considering measures, including buying unsold inventory and raising
export rebates, to help steelmakers weather the slowdown, Minister of
Industry and Information Li Yizhong told Bloomberg News on Dec. 12.
That represents a dangerous shift in policy that could hinder
international trade, according to Myron Brilliant, vice president for
Asia at the U.S. Chamber of Commerce in Washington. The economic crisis
has prompted China to turn back to “export-oriented policies that could
lead to an increase in the trade imbalance” and new tension with the
United States.
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson has spent more than two years
smoothing over U.S.-China trade relations. Part of those efforts
focused on the value of China’s currency, the yuan, to redress what
U.S. officials saw as an unfair price advantage for Chinese products.
The yuan rose 21% versus the dollar from 2005, but its steady rise
stalled in July, and has barely budged since.
Before leaving for trade talks in Beijing this month, Paulson told
business representatives his biggest concern was that China would
revise policy and reverse moves it had made during the past year to cut
aid to exporters and stimulate domestic consumption.
China’s five-year plan through 2010 aims to rebalance growth away from
exports and increase domestic consumption, but so far it has met with
dismal results. Household consumption declined to slightly more than
35% of China’s gross domestic product [GDP] last year from 45% in 1993.
By comparison, consumer spending represents almost 70% of the U.S.
economy.
“What separates China from the rest of the world is its incredibly low
level of consumption relative to GDP,” Brad Setser, a fellow at the
Council on Foreign Relations in Washington, told Bloomberg News. “What
can China do that would most directly help the world economy during a
period of very severe weakness? Get its consumption back up to 40% of
GDP.”
A shift in Chinese policy is bound to meet with resistance in U.S.
business circles, especially among steelmakers. Lawyers representing
Nucor Corp (NUE), the second-largest U.S. steelmaker, and smaller steel
pipe makers say they are considering new trade complaints against China.
Source: Seeking Alpha