Posts Tagged: ‘global steel’

Steel Market Production Changes – May 21 & 22, 2012

May 22, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

Steel Market Production Increases – RG Steel has restarted operations at its 3 million tpy Sparrows Point, Maryland blast furnace which was temporarily shut down again over the weekend.

Steel Market Production Increases – Turkish producer Icdas is set to boost capacity by 1 million tonnes per year at its Biga works in the Marmara region of Turkey when its new billet meltshop comes online in early June.

Steel Market Production Cuts – Italian steel group Arvedi and Brazilian producer Metalfer have postponed the start of the 360,000 tonne per year initial phase of their joint-venture tube mill in São Paulo state, Brazil.

Steel Market Production Cuts – ArcelorMittal’s expansion project aimed at doubling billet and wire rod capacity to 2.4 and 2.3 million tonnes per year at the Monlevade unit in south-eastern Brazil has been suspended indefinitely due to a lack of domestic demand and a poor outlook globally.

Steel Market Production Cuts – Turkish producer Yolbulan Bastug has placed plans to install a new 700,000 tonnes per year capacity rebar and wire rod mill on hold due to a slowdown in local longs trade and certain export markets.

Sources: Steel Business Briefing, American Metal Market

Advance/Decliner Index Plunges as Chinese Weakness Spreads

May 22, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

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As global pricing weakened still further, largely on the back of new record production from China combined with weak economic growth globally, our Advance/Decliner Index plummeted from 31% to 16%, the lowest level since early November (any reading below 50 means more price cuts were reported than increases).

Pricing deterioration in the US, MENA, Europe and the CIS drove our Ex-China Index falling to a six-and-a-half month low of 19% from 38% last week.

Our China Index remained at zero for the third consecutive week – just the fourth time in history this has ever occurred – as steel prices remained under pressure despite Beijing’s reserve requirement rate cut and supportive pro-growth verbiage.  The Chinese steel market remained spooked by a combination of a mid-May flash production report showing yet another record production month in the offing, as well as a 5% plunge in spot iron ore prices which are being equally driven by weakened steel demand.

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

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Weekly Raw Steel Production Declines from Post-Recession High

May 22, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

Weekly domestic raw steel production declined 1.4% to 1.976 million tons (mt) for the week ending May 19, 2012, falling from last week’s post-recession high of 2.005 mt.  Despite the downturn, production is up 8.5% compared to the year-ago level.  The lowest production level since the recession began was 800,000 for the week of December 27, 2008.

The capacity utilization rate also fell this week, dropping from 81.1% last week to 80.0%, but was higher than the year-ago level of 74.5%.  The lowest capacity utilization rate since the recession began was 33.5% for the week of December 27, 2008; the highest was 81.1% on April 21, 2012 and May 12, 2012.

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

April Finished Steel Imports Hit Post-Recession High on Jump in Chinese Imports

May 22, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

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April preliminary steel imports increased 3.4% to 3.0 million tons (mt) from March’s 2.9 mt as an 8.0% increase in finished steel imports was only partially offset by a 10.2% drop in semi-finished steel imports.  The uptick puts year-to-date imports nearly 30% higher than year-ago levels.

The increase was driven by a 46.8% jump in sheet tonnage to the highest level since December 2006.  While there was some pricing premium for domestic sheet in early January, we suspect that much of the jump in sheet imports is now being driven more off of a supply-push import surge due to overproduction in other regions, particularly China.

Chinese imports jumped 35.6% in April to the highest level since July as overproduction in the country has resulted in a 28% increase in exports year-to-date.  We believe China is the main reason behind the 55.7% surge in wire rod imports – to a 4-year high – while Chinese steelmakers have also continued to ship higher levels of cold-rolled and coated sheet products that benefit from China’s VAT export tax rebates.

Our full report is available to subscribers and provides further thoughts on April imports as well as our outlook for the coming months and implications for steel equities.

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April Steel Production Hits New High on China Spike; Rest of World Declines

May 22, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

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While April global steel production rose 0.5% to a new all-time high of 4.279 million tonnes per day (mtpd), a 1.6% rise in Chinese production masked a 0.6% decline in the rest of the world. The 50% increase in Chinese production since before the start of the recession, coupled with a 28% increase in Chinese net exports year-to-date is a stark reminder of the reemergence of China’s runaway steelmaking freight train.

Despite the fact that most Chinese steelmakers are bleeding red ink, so far in May, Chinese production continues at a record pace, running at 2.045 mtpd or an annualized 749 mt, some 9.6% above the prior peak.

Looking at the US, we’re seeing production still down 9% from the pre-recession peak, despite the fact that imports are actually up 32% year-to-date.

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

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U.S. Rig Count Rises Again, Canadian Declines Come to an End

May 18, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

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The number of active oil and natural gas rigs in the United States rose for the third straight week to 1,986 for the week ending May 18, 2012, climbing 0.6% from last week’s 1,974. The rig count is also up 8.5% from the year-ago level.

The highest weekly rig count in the United States since 1940 was recorded on December 28, 1981, at 4,530; the lowest was recorded on April 23, 1999, at 488.

The number of rigs in Canada also increased 2.5% to 123 this week from 120 last week, breaking 14 straight weeks of declines.  The rig count is down 14.0% from the year-ago level however.

The highest rig count for Canada was 727 on February 3, 2006; the lowest was 29, recorded on April 24, 1992.

Source: Baker Hughes Inc.

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CSN – Surprisingly Bullish on Brazilian Market – Thoughts from the 1Q Conference Call

May 18, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

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Companhia Siderurgica Nacional (CSN) reported adjusted EBITDA of R$1.113B, some 15.4% short of the Street’s R$1.316B and was 24% below 4Q’s R$1.463B.  The company mainly attributed weaker results to a combination of a 16.5% drop in iron ore volumes due to excessive rainfall in Brazil as well as 9.3% decline in iron ore prices, but said that steel results declined as well due to a less favorable product mix and higher costs.

Guidance was limited during the call, with CSN providing qualitative comments only. The company was bullish about the prospects in the Brazilian market, saying that costs are declining due to lower iron ore and coal prices and imports are likely to fall from 2m tonnes in 2011 to 1m tonnes this year which should increase domestic market share.  The company said that for hot-rolled coils domestic prices are actually at a slight discount to imports, while the domestic price premium is “slightly positive” for cold-rolled and 5-7% for hot-dipped galvanized sheet.  Management said that given the combination of these factors, it will try to raise prices by 5-10% by the end of June.

The positive commentary was contrary to what Klockner had said about the Brazilian market just a few days before during their conference call.

Our full report is available to subscribers only and provides further thoughts on CSN’s 1Q conference call, as well as our opinion on the stock and the implication for other steel equities.

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Steel Market Production Changes – May 18, 2012

May 18, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

Steel Market Production Increases – ArcelorMittal Termitau plans to resume normal operations by the end of the month following a fire on May 15th that led to the idling of the hot coil rolling and galvanizing lines as well as reduced production at the CRC mill.

Steel Market Production Increases – Chinese producer Xugang has announced that it plans to construct new facilities with a total production capacity of 10 million tonnes per year in a move intended to shift its focus to the production of specialty steels.

Steel Market Production Cuts – Nippon Steel is extending its reduction in output of H-beams and sheet pile at its Kimitsu works till at least the end of June from early June, citing high inventories.

Sources: Steel Business Briefing, American Metal Market, SteelOrbis

ThyssenKrupp (TKA) – Steel Americas Sale Being Weighed; Sheet Discounting in the US Market – Thoughts from the MarQ Conference Call

May 18, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

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ThyssenKrupp (TKA) reported MarQ adjusted EBIT of €134m, below the Street’s €171.6m, but a 61% improvement sequentially and 69% above the year-ago quarter. Increased profits in the Components Technology and Marine Systems businesses offset lower earnings in the Elevator and Plant Technology units, while the steel business saw increased volume but severe price pressure.

Guidance for fiscal 2012 was for EBIT to be in the mid-three-digit-euro range, which would represent a modest improvement in 2H (JunQ and SepQ) compared with 1H (DecQ and MarQ). Earnings in the Steel Europe business should approximate those of 1H, while the Steel Americas unit will see continuing price pressure, the company said.

In the US, management said operations at the Alabama rolling mill continue to improve, with volumes increasing 25% to 777,000 tonnes in 1Q from 622,000 tonnes in 4Q; sales were 154% higher than year-ago levels.  However, Thyssen said they have had to offer discounts to enter markets and had excess inventory that was sold at higher-than-originally expected discounts.

Our full report is available to subscribers only and provides further thoughts on Thyssen’s MarQ conference call, as well as our views on the potential sale of Thyssen’s plants in the US and Brazil, our opinion of the stock and the implication for other steel equities.

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Iron Ore Price Drops to Five-Month Low

May 18, 2012 Posted by Steel Market Intelligence

The spot reference price for 62% Fe iron ore cfr North China steadily declined all week, settling at $131.30 on Friday, May 18, 2012, down some 4.6% from last Friday to the lowest level since December 19, 2011.  Iron ore has now posted five straight weekly declines and is now down some 12.1% from the recent peak on April 13.

The post-recession low was $59.10 on March 27, 2009, while the high was $190.19 on February 17, 2011.

Source: The Steel Index