News was prepared under the information support of Online Daily Newspaper on Hellenic and international Shipping "Hellenic Shipping News". |
25 Feb 2010
US customers are cautiously optimistic that consumption will grow for seasonal reasons in the spring. At present, the supply/demand balance for strip mill products is relatively tight, with steelmakers quoting May deliveries. The availability situation could change quite quickly,
however, as several previously idled blast furnaces are set to come back
on stream. We can report that the latest business has been settled at
substantially higher transaction values than in January. Input
expenditure has been a big factor in pricing recently as ferrous scrap,
iron ore, coking coal and energy costs have all showed increases.
Overseas offerings continue to be very scarce.
Canadian mills report that order intake is good. They are essentially
booked out for March, with April filling up quickly. Transaction figures
continue to climb on a monthly basis and further movement is considered
likely. The rises are cost based as producers see their raw material
outlay escalate. Service centres state that import offers are minimal at
present. Their inventory positions are comfortable but sales activity
is inconsistent.
Following some previous weakness, Chinese domestic prices have
stabilised, with many traders and customers out of the market for the
long New Year holidays. Just prior to the break, Baosteel said it would
raise its March ex-works values. The hike is supported by excellent
demand from auto and electrical appliance makers. However, bloated
inventories remain a cause for concern. Market players believe the
government may intervene by tightening lending to traders.
Overall demand is fairly stable in Japan, driven by auto and export
sales, although construction industry consumption remains sluggish.
Higher scrap outlay, plus the anticipated growing costs of iron ore and
coking coal, are now pushing market prices in a positive direction.
Meanwhile, quayside stocks of imported flat products, as end December,
were at similar levels to the previous month. Buyers are wary of
purchasing large volumes from overseas.
Growing demand in South Korea from the vehicle and home appliance
sectors is expected to be underpinned by continued government stimulus
measures. Further inventory adjustment at the distributors is necessary.
Domestic steel prices continue to strengthen in Taiwan where mill order
intake is described as "buoyant".
Strip mill product values failed to move up in Poland over the last
month. Producers would like to apply a €20/40 per tonne rise for the
second quarter but some customer resistance is envisaged. Although a
degree of restocking took place during January, underlying consumption
remains muted.
We have noted a number of new developments in the Czech/Slovak market,
all of which have resulted from very firm mill pricing policies.
Producers have further restricted supply because they are determined to
claw back some of the significantly higher costs they are incurring.
However, this initiative is not supported by demand and customers debate
whether the present levels can be sustained for any length of time.
Profit margins at the service centres are being squeezed even tighter.
In Western Europe, first quarter strip mill product business is
virtually finished now and spot prices have moved up in many instances.
They are expected to rise further in period two if the mills' plans
prove successful. Most producers have not quantified their proposals, so
far. Although stocks are low throughout the supply chain, end-user
consumption has failed to recover. Consequently, buyers are very
cautious. Distributors, in particular, question whether they will be
able to recoup the increases from their customers.
Source: MEPS