Archive for: ‘March 2012’

Advance/Decliner Index Declines from Year-High

March 21, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

New Report Preview

After increasing four straight weeks to a one year-high of 87% last week, our Advance/Decliner Index fell back to 74% this week (any reading over 50 means that the number of price increases exceeded the number of declines).

Our Ex-China Index declined for the first time in five weeks as some mills – most notably in Turkey – were reducing export offers due to a slowdown in overseas demand.  Our China Index fell to 80% from the 7-month high of 92% reached last week, although pricing continued to improve for most products.

Our full report provides further thoughts about global steel pricing trends and our outlook as well as implications for steel equities.

For a free trial subscription, please contact us.

Steel Market Production Changes – March 20, 2012

March 20, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

Steel Market Production Cuts – ArcelorMittal has proposed to idle its electric arc furnace and continuous caster at Schifflange, Luxembourg, for an indefinite period of time due to continued weakness in the European construction market.

Steel Market Production Increases – According to China Iron and Steel Association’s latest production “flash,” China produced 1.898m tonnes/day of crude steel during the first ten days of March, up 13.1% from 1.679m tpd in the last nine days of February.

Sources: Fox Business, Steel Business Briefing

February Global Steel Production Posts Seasonal Uptick – First Look

March 20, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

New Report Preview

With nearly 2/3 of February’s global steel production increase coming from a resurgence in China, output rose 4.2% to 4.110 million tonnes per day (mtpd), in line with the typical seasonal uptick of 4.6%.

Increases included a seasonal 7.8% increase in the EU, as well as pick-ups in the Middle East (up 11.3%), South America (up 6.9%), China (up 5.3%), Asia ex-China (up 2.8%), and North America (up 0.8% with the US up 0.7%).  The most meaningful decline was recorded by Turkey, with production falling 5.1%, while output was down a nominal 0.2% in the CIS.

Our full report is available to subscribers only and provides further thoughts on global steel production and pricing and the implications for steel equities.

For a free trial subscription, please contact us.

To Be or Not to Be – Overcapacity in the US or Not? Views from the Supply Side

March 19, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

We attended Steel Business Briefing’s Steel Markets North America 2012 conference last week and in two jam-packed days, we heard a wide-ranging debate on a number of issues – most interesting was the theme of the supply side discussion, which ran throughout the conference.

It’s our own belief that supply has become more important than demand in calling the steel markets – with imports ranging from 24% of the market (netting out exports) to 36% of the market over the various months of 2011, the net impact – 11.5 mtpy – is FAR greater than new capacity!

Mark Schweitzer, Senior Vice President and Director of Research at the Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, shared the view that there is still overcapacity in the marketplace.  Tony Taccone, Partner at First River Consulting, says that Europe and Japan are not natural “net exporters” and that US exports are likely to surprise moving forward, which would take supply out of the market.

Lourenco Goncalves, Chairman, President & CEO at Metals USA, says that we do not have overcapacity in the United States, and that this is misinformation as US steel consumption always outpaces production. Mark Breckheimer, President of the Heavy Carbon Group at Kloeckner Metals, says that imports are likely to remain at higher levels through May and then decline starting in the June/July period, falling back to 1.5-1.7 million tons.

Sergei Kuznetsov, CEO of Severstal North America, sees the market as easily absorbing his new capacity and that it is displacing some imports. Export opportunities are also helping sales growth, according to Kuznetsov.  Mark Millett, President & CEO of Steel Dynamics, believes there is more than enough room for the new sheet capacity coming online when the market recovers. Mark Parr, Managing Director at KeyBanc Capital Markets, pointed to Thyssen as having “staying power” while he said that he doesn’t see RG Steel as “working out.”

Jim Tumulty, Senior Managing Director at the The Seaport Group, said that the September USW labor contract expiration could be a “black swan” event, disrupting supply.  Timna Tanners, from Bank of America Merrill Lynch, sees oversupply in the market and says that inventories have already been rebuilt.

Metalico (MEA) – Ferrous Scrap Prices Stable; Domestic/Overseas Demand to Remain Firm – Thoughts from the 4Q Conference Call

March 19, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

New Report Preview

Metalico (MEA) swung to a 4Q loss of $(0.06)/share after posting a profit of $0.11/share in 3Q, missing the Street’s estimate of a $(0.01) loss as “sluggish” pricing hit metal margins.  The company built inventories ahead of the start-up of a new shredder which impacted margins/volume in 4Q as well.

Guidance through the first six months of the year is for ferrous scrap prices to remain stable, trading in a narrow range, while the company forecast both domestic and export demand to stay “firm.” Improving energy and automotive markets coupled with a slow US economic recovery should continue to drive demand for steel, and the company’s scrap shipments are expected to trend substantially higher in 2012 as Metalico’s Buffalo shredder, which started recently, gradually ramps up to full capacity of 12,000-15,000 tons per month (tpm).

Our full report is available to subscribers only and provides further thoughts on Metalico’s 4Q earnings report and conference call as well as the implication for the stock and other equities.

For a free trial subscription, please contact us.

February Distributor Inventories Rise Modestly; Months’ Supply Healthy

March 19, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

New Report Preview

February MSCI shipments declined 2.0%, only nominally worse than the typical sideways sequential move we see, while inventory tons rose 1.9%, leading to months’ supply (MOS) rising nominally from 2.3 to 2.4.

The third consecutive monthly increase in inventories lifted tonnage to another post-recession high, while February shipments were still the second highest since September 2008 despite the modest sequential decrease.  Average daily shipments were 9.2% higher year-over-year, with all steel products posting gains.

Our full report is available to subscribers and provides further thoughts on February distributor shipments and inventories by product as well as implications for steel equities.

For a free trial subscription, please contact us.

Steel Market Production Changes – March 19, 2012

March 19, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

Steel Market Production Increases – ArcelorMittal is due to begin commercial production in April on its new, 400,000 tonnes/year (tpy) rolling mill to make European profiles at its Hunedoara billet and sections plant in Romania.

Source: Steel Business Briefing

Weekly Raw Steel Production Falls from Post-Recession High

March 19, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

Weekly domestic raw steel production declined 2.4% to 1.913 million tons (mt) for the week ending March 17, 2012, marking the largest decline since the year began, though still 5.9% above the year ago level. The highest production since the recession began was 1.959 mt on March 10, 2012, while the lowest was 0.8 mt on December 27, 2008.

The capacity utilization rate also posted the largest decline of the year, coming in at 77.4% compared to 79.3% last week, although this was still higher than the year ago level of 73.9%. The highest capacity utilization rate since the recession began was 79.3% on March 10, 2012, while the lowest was 33.5% on December 27, 2008.

Note: AISI weekly production data only includes real-time input from 50% of producing members; the remainder of the data is a guesstimate based on each company’s prior-month production and therefore the weekly AISI data lags when there are production cuts or increases going on.

Source: AISI and Steel Market Intelligence

February Steel Distributor Inventories Up Modestly; Months’ Supply Healthy – First Look

March 19, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

New Report Preview

February MSCI shipments declined 2.0%, only nominally worse than the typical sideways move we see from January to February, while inventory tons rose 1.9% and months’ supply rose from 2.3 to 2.4 on the back of declining shipments and rising inventories.

In February, we saw weaker-than-seasonally normal shipments for flat-rolled and plate, partially offset by stronger-than-usual shipments of beams and bar.  Inventories for all steel products rose in February.

Our full report is available to subscribers and provides further thoughts on February distributor shipments and inventories by product as well as implications for steel equities.

For a free trial subscription, please contact us.

Check out Steel Market Intelligence on LinkedIn

March 19, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

Steel Market Intelligence on LinkedInStay up to date with the latest news and freshest analysis from Steel Market Intelligence by joining our group on LinkedIn.

Simply click the link or logo to join our page.