Shanghai steel prices sag as U.S. tariffs loom

Shanghai steel prices sag as U.S. tariffs loom

10th july 2018

Chinese steel prices dropped on Friday ahead of the United States imposing tariffs on $34 billion in Chinese goods in a few hours, with further losses likely as the trade row between the world’s two largest economies threatens market stability.
President Donald Trump confirmed that the United States would begin collecting the tariffs at 12:01 a.m. Washington D.C. time (0401 GMT) on Friday and warned that subsequent rounds could see tariffs on more than $500 billion of goods, or roughly the total amount that the United States imported from China last year.
“The Trump administration’s trade war is finally upon us, and by all accounts, we’re headed for an unparalleled trade conflict between the world’s largest economies,” Stephen Innes, head of Asia Pacific trading at OANDA brokerage, said in a note. “If this moves off the tit for tat battleground into a full out trade war, it will not only threaten market stability but could compromise relations between Washington and Beijing.”
The price of construction steel product rebar on the Shanghai Futures Exchange was down 0.7 percent at 3,748 yuan ($563) a tonne by 0205 GMT.
Hot rolled coil, used in manufacturing, fell 1 percent to 3,819 yuan.
Other risky assets from commodities including oil and copper were also weaker and Asian stocks were subdued with investors on edge ahead of the U.S. tariffs taking effect.
A drop in weekly steel inventory in China suggested demand remained firm in the world’s largest consumer and producer. Total steel stocks dropped 154,600 tonnes to 10.098 million tonnes this week, data compiled by Mysteel consultancy showed.
That followed a two-week increase which came after a 14-week decline.
Prices of steelmaking ingredients were steady to weaker, with iron ore on the Dalian Commodity Exchange up 0.1 percent at 456 yuan a tonne and coking coal flat at 1,143 yuan. Coke fell 1.3 percent to 1,984.50 yuan.
Source: REUTERS

China’s steel base to further slash capacity

China’s steel base to further slash capacity

10th july 2018

Hebei Province is to continue huge capacity cuts in the next three years, according to a government plan announced on Wednesday.
The province will slash capacity of steel and iron, coal, concrete, and coke by 40 million, 30 million, five million and 10 million tonnes respectively next three years, according to the plan.
Since 2013, Hebei shifted its energy and industry structures from coal and steel to emerging, high-end industries. From 2013 to 2017, the province cut capacity of steel, iron and concrete by 70 million, 64 million and 71 million tonnes respectively.
China plans to eliminate 100 million to 150 million tonnes of crude steel capacity and 500 million tonnes of coal in the five years from 2016.
Source: XINHUA

JSPL Q1 India steel sales up 46% YoY, flat QoQ

JSPL Q1 India steel sales up 46% YoY, flat QoQ

10th july 2018

Jindal Steel and Power Limited said steel sales volumes in India rose 46% in Apr-Jun quarter to 1.18 mln tons compared to the year ago.
The sales number is at a similar level to the preceding Jan-Mar quarter, when the company had sold 1.18 million tons.
In terms of production, there was an increase of 36% on year at its two India locations, at 1.23 mln tons. This was slightly lower than the 1.26 mln tons reported for Jan-Mar.
On the global front, Jindal Shadeed – JSPL’s subsidiary in Oman, had its highest ever crude and finished steel production and sales during April–June 2018.
The company also has a 9 MTPA pellet production plant, billed as India’s largest single-location pelletization complex. The quarterly output of the plant was not disclosed.
“JSPL is on course to translate its blueprint for enhancing capacity utilizations and efficiencies across all its steel plants,” sadi NA Ansari, CEO of Steel Business for JSPL.
“While the ramp up at our 6 MTPA steel plant at Angul is on desired trajectory, the steel plant at Raigarh has set new benchmarks of exceeding excellence,” he added.
“We are confident of further accelerating the growth momentum, both in production as well as sales, in the forthcoming quarters to record FY 2018-19 as the best ever year in JSPL’s history.”
The company has a 6 million ton per year plant at Angul in Odisha, which it said achieved the highest ever billet and TMT rebar production in its history in the month of June 2018.
Its second plant, at Raigarh in Chhattisgarh, had the best ever monthly production at two units — Blast Furnace 1 and Medium & Light Structural Mill (MLSM). Moreover, the quarter also saw record sales by the Rail Mill and MLSM units during June.
Jindal Shadeed’s 1.5 MTPA Bar Mill – the largest in the world, set a new world record of highest single day production of over 5000 tons in June, it said.
Source: ULTRA NEWS

JSW Steel to spend ₹7,500 crore to raise production capacity

JSW Steel to spend ₹7,500 crore to raise production capacity

10th july 2018

JSW Steel, a part of the diversified $13-billion JSW Group, announced on Wednesday that it planned to increase the annual steel manufacturing capacity of JSW Vijayanagar Works in Karnataka to 13 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) at a cost of ₹ 7,500 crore.
The expansion is likely to be over by March 2020, according to a company statement. At 12 MTPA currently, JSW Vijayanagar Works is the largest state-of-the-art single location steel manufacturing unit in India.
The company will also set up a 1.5 MTPA coke oven plant at Vijayanagar to bridge the current and expected gaps in coke availability. This is likely to be commissioned by March 2020.
The coke oven unit is expected to provide significant cost savings for the company over the longer term. It will also modify and enhance capacity of its steel melting shop, the flat and long products mills, along with allied facilities to utilise this additional hot metal.
The company’s current project to revamp and upgrade the capacity of blast furnace-3 at JSW Vijayanagar Works is on track, a release said..
“With steel consumption in India expected to grow, these capacity enhancement initiatives will ensure our readiness to promptly service emerging customer demand,” said Vinod Nowal, deputy managing director, JSW Steel.
JSW Steel has also started operations at two iron ore mines (Tunga & Nandi Mines) in Karnataka for which it has already received statutory clearances.
The cumulative capacity of these two iron ore mines is 0.71 MTPA. For the remaining three mines, JSW Steel expects statutory clearances and approvals during the current fiscal.
The annual production capacity of the five mines acquired by JSW Steel, through 2017 auction, is approximately 4.66 MTPA. Once all five mines are operational, they are expected to fulfil approximately 20% of the iron ore requirement of JSW Vijayanagar Works steel manufacturing unit.
All these five mines are located within 20-35 kilometers from the Vijayanagar unit giving it an advantage of lower logistics cost. Historically, JSW Steel was completely dependent on the external market to meet its iron ore requirements.
JSW Steel remains strategically focussed on enriching its product mix by increasing the share of value added & special steel products, according to the statement.
Source: THE HINDU

Indian steel demand may double to 170 mt by 2025: BHP Billiton

Indian steel demand may double to 170 mt by 2025: BHP Billiton

10th july 2018

Anglo-Australian mining giant BHP Billiton has forecast Indian steel demand will double by 2025, even as it termed the government’s steel production target of 300 million tonnes by 2030 as “aspirational”.
“Steel is going to be a great enabler for the Indian growth story, particularly for the downstream sector,” Huw McKay, vice-president, analysis and economics, at BHP Billiton, said on phone. “Using 2016 as the base, we expect the demand to double to roughly around 170 MT by 2025,” McKay told ET.
India produced 97 million tonnes of crude steel in 2016-17.
McKay said construction and infrastructure would occupy the “lion’s share” of this growth in demand, with steel consumption growing almost at the same clip as the sector—at 8% till 2025.
But the economist maintained that the government’s steel output target of 300 million tonnes by 2030 is “aspirational”. He, however, conceded that the acceleration of insolvency proceedings should assist the sector and will also give it an upside.
The company, which also exports copper concentrates to India, said the shutting down of Vedanta’s 400,000-tonne plant at Tuticorin amid bloody protests in May has impacted its shipments to India, but the international price of copper has stayed strong. “This speaks of the resilience of the copper market,” said McKay.
An international trade war sparked by the US imposing import tariffs of 25% and 10% on steel and aluminium, respectively, has countries guessing its effects and coming up with their own strategies to counter a likely dumping in their respective countries. McKay, however, said there is enough demand in the world to absorb the steel.
“There is a very broad-based growth of demand in the global economy,” he said, adding that with India exporting to neighbouring economies rather than “far flung markets”, there is not much cause of worry. McKay said BHP is not in favour of any kind of protectionism.
Source: THE ECONOMIC TIMES

India’s crude steel output up 6 per cent at 26 million tonne

India’s crude steel output up 6 per cent at 26 million tonne

10th july 2018

India’s crude steel output grew six per cent to 26 million tonne (MT) in the first quarter of the ongoing financial year, according to official data. The country had produced 24.5 MT of crude steel during April-June, 2017-18, the Joint Plant Committee (JPC) said in its latest report. The JPC, under Ministry of Steel, collects and maintains data on the domestic iron and steel sector.
“During April-June, crude steel production was 26.08 MT (provisional), a growth of 6.2 per cent over the same period of last year,” the report said. State-run SAIL, Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Ltd (RINL), Tata Steel, Essar Steel, JSW Steel and Jindal Steel and Power Ltd (JSPL) together produced 15.6 MT during the three-month period, registering a growth of 12 per cent over the year-ago period.
During the reported quarter, the output of hot metal was at 17.88 MT as compared to 16.10 MT during the year-ago period, an increase of 11 per cent. The output of pig iron rose 5 per cent to 2.58 MT from 2.45 MT in April-June of 2017-18.
According to World Steel Organisation (worldsteel), India outstripped Japan to become the second largest steel producer as its steel output grew 3.43 per cent to 8.43 MT in February against 8.29 MT of the latter. India has set a target of producing 300 MT crude steel by 2030 with an investment of Rs 10 lakh crore.
Source: PTI

US-China trade war elevates the risks to the global economy

US-China trade war elevates the risks to the global economy

10th july 2018

The trade war that erupted Friday between the U.S. and China carries a major risk of escalation that could weaken investment, depress spending, unsettle financial markets and slow the global economy.
The opening shots were fired just after midnight, when the Trump administration imposed a 25 percent tariff on $34 billion of imports from China, and Beijing promptly retaliated with duties on an equal amount of American products. It accused the U.S. of igniting “the biggest trade war in economic history.”
Because of this first round of hostilities, American businesses and, ultimately, consumers could end up paying more for such Chinese-made products as construction equipment and other machinery. And American suppliers of soybeans, pork and whiskey could lose their competitive edge in China.
These initial tariffs are unlikely to inflict serious harm to the world’s two biggest economies. Gregory Daco, head of U.S. economics at Oxford Economics, has calculated that they would pare growth in both countries by no more than 0.2 percent through 2020.
But the conflict could soon escalate. President Donald Trump, who has boasted that winning a trade war is easy , has said he is prepared to impose tariffs on up to $550 billion in Chinese imports — a figure that exceeds the $506 billion in goods that China shipped to the U.S. last year.
Escalating tariffs are likely to slow business investment as companies wait to see whether the administration can reach a truce with Beijing. Some employers will probably put hiring on hold until the picture becomes clearer. The damage could risk undoing some of the economic benefits of last year’s tax cuts.
“Trade disruption is the greatest threat to global growth,” said Dec Mullarkey, managing director of investment strategies at Sun Life Investment Management. “The direct effects will be amplified as business confidence drops and investment decisions are delayed. Markets are still hoping that the key players return to the negotiation table.”
The root of the conflict is the Trump administration’s assertion that China has long used predatory tactics in a drive to supplant America’s technological supremacy. Those tactics include cyber-theft as well as forcing companies to hand over technology in exchange for access to China’s market. Trump’s tariffs are meant to press Beijing to change its ways.
The rift with China is the most consequential trade conflict the administration has provoked. But it’s hardly the only one.
Trump is also sparring with the European Union over his threat to tax auto imports and with Canada and Mexico over his push to rewrite the North American trade pact. And he has subjected most of America’s trading partners to tariffs on steel and aluminum.
Many caught in the initial line of fire — U.S. farmers absorbing tariffs on their exports to China, for instance — are fearful. The price of soybeans has plunged 13 percent over the past month on fears that Chinese tariffs will cut off American farmers from China, which buys about 60 percent of their soybean exports.
“For soybean producers like me, this is a direct financial hit,” said Brent Bible, a soy and corn producer in Romney, Indiana. “These tariffs could mean the difference between a profit and a loss for an entire year’s worth of work out in the field, and that’s only in the near term.”
Christine LoCascio, an executive at the Distilled Spirits Council, said she fears China’s tariffs on U.S. whiskey will “put the brakes on an American success story” of rising exports of U.S. spirits.
Even before the first shots, the prospect of a trade war was worrying investors. The Dow Jones industrial average has shed hundreds of points since June 11. But the risks are now priced into the market, and the Dow actually rose nearly 100 points Friday to 24,456.48.
China’s currency, the yuan, has dropped 3.5 percent against the dollar over the past month, giving Chinese companies a price edge over their U.S. competition. The drop might reflect a deliberate devaluation by Beijing to signal its “displeasure over the state of trade negotiations,” according to a report from the Institute of International Finance, a banking trade group.
The Trump administration sought to limit the impact of the tariffs on U.S. households by targeting Chinese industrial goods, not consumer products, for the first round of tariffs.
But that step raises costs for U.S. companies that rely on Chinese-made machinery or components. And it could force them to pass those higher costs on to their business customers and, eventually, to consumers.
If you like Chick-fil-A sandwiches, for instance, you may feel the effects. Charlie Souhrada of the North American Food Equipment Manufacturers said the tariffs could raise the cost of a kind of pressure cooker Chick-fil-A uses.
The administration has placed “these import taxes squarely on the shoulders of manufacturers and, by extension, consumers,” Souhrada said.
One way the tariffs will squeeze farmers, landscapers and construction firms is by raising the price of excavators and loaders made by Bobcat, which uses attachments imported from China. U.S. suppliers rarely make these attachments, so the company must import them.
Jason Mayberry, Bobcat’s assistant general counsel, said in a filing submitted to the U.S. Trade Representative’s office that the company would have to raise prices to offset the tariff. Bobcat’s raw material costs have also risen because of the administration’s steel and aluminum tariffs.
The Federal Reserve is picking up signs that the trade war is causing businesses to rethink investment plans. In the minutes from its June meeting, the Fed noted that some companies have delayed or reduced plans to buy or upgrade equipment.
And if Trump extends the tariffs to up to $550 billion in Chinese imports, consumers won’t be able to avoid getting caught in the crossfire: The taxes would hit products like televisions and cellphones.
That’s what happened to imported washing machines, which were hit by separate Trump tariffs in January. Over the past year, their price has surged more than 8 percent.
American trade groups are urging the two countries to resume talks.
“Tariffs will bring retaliation and possibly more tariffs,” said Jay Timmons, president of the National Association of Manufacturers. “No one wins in a trade war.”
Source: ABC NEWS

China June manufacturing sector growth ebbs as export orders shrink: Caixin PMI

China June manufacturing sector growth ebbs as export orders shrink: Caixin PMI

10th july 2018

Growth in China’s manufacturing sector cooled slightly in June as firms faced rising input costs and a decline in export orders amid an escalating trade dispute with the United States, a private survey showed on Monday.
The Caixin/Markit Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ index (PMI) declined to 51.0 in June from May’s 51.1, matching economists’ forecast.
It remained above the 50-point mark that separates growth from contraction for the 13th consecutive month.
A sub-index for output rose to 52.1 in June, a four-month high, though new order growth slowed and companies chose to sell down existing inventories instead of restocking.
The survey showed new export orders contracted for the third straight month and the most in two years, though there was no significant slide from the previous two months.
China faces escalating trade tensions with the United States, its largest export market, adding to uncertainty about the manufacturing sector at a time when domestic demand also appears to be cooling.
Economic data in May showed China’s economy is finally slowing, with weaker credit growth and a tighter liquidity environment hurting investment in local government building projects, which have helped boost the industrial sector.
This week the U.S. and China are set to impose new tariffs on each other’s imports, with both sides threatening to up the ante if the other doesn’t back down.
Investors have punished Chinese stocks and the yuan currency since the trade dispute intensified over the last month, with the yuan taking a battering against the dollar in June and domestic stocks tumbling the most in a month since January 2016.
For now, though China’s factories appear to have maintained solid overall growth, despite the government’s war on industrial pollution, a slowing housing market and a tightening funding environment.
Official PMI released on Saturday did show a slowing of factory growth in June, with the manufacturing index slipping to 51.5, from May’s 51.9.
Underscoring growing anxiety about the outlook, Caixin’s June survey found that manufacturers were the least optimistic they have been about future growth prospects since December.
“Overall, the manufacturing PMI survey pointed to strengthening price pressures in June. Deteriorating exports and weak employment, along with companies’ destocking and poor capital turnover, put pressure on the manufacturing sector,” Zhengsheng Zhong, director of Macroeconomic Analysis at CEBM Group, said in a note accompanying the survey.
Input price pressures picked up again in June, with firms citing higher prices for commodities such as steel, signalling an increase in cost burdens for Chinese factories.
Manufacturers raised their sales prices at the fastest pace since September.
The employment situation for factory workers worsened in June, with a sub-index showing Chinese factories cut staff at the fastest pace since last July.
Source: REUTERS

China’s economy predicted to expand 6.7 percent in H1

China’s economy predicted to expand 6.7 percent in H1

10th july 2018

China’s economy is predicted to expand 6.7 percent in the first half of 2018, slightly retreating from the growth seen in the first quarter but showing continued resilience, according to forecast by financial institutions and economists.
Despite some external uncertainties, China’s economy has extended an improving trend on the back of the global economic recovery, rising new growth momentum and a warming property market, said a report released by the international financial research institution with the Bank of China.
Lian Ping, chief economist of the Bank of Communications, also forecast growth of 6.7 percent.
In the second quarter, the contribution of consumption and investment to economic growth may come in at 70 percent and 35 percent, respectively. Although net exports made negative contribution to growth, the fast growth of exports helped pull up manufacturing production and investment, according to Lian.
For the outlook in the second half of the year, chief economist of CITIC Securities Chu Jianfang believes there will be no big risk of recession and the economy will remain resilient, citing rising industrial investment, steady infrastructure investment and warming external demand.
The Chinese economy registered 6.8-percent growth in the first quarter.
China is scheduled to release a string of economic data including GDP growth for the second quarter on July 16.
Source: XINHUA

Nikkei Manufacturing PMI rises to 53.1 in June, the fastest growth in 2018; job creation accelerates too

Nikkei Manufacturing PMI rises to 53.1 in June, the fastest growth in 2018; job creation accelerates too

10th july 2018

The latest Nikkei India Manufacturing Purchasing Managers Index (PMI) survey brings plenty to cheer about. The PMI rose to 53.1 in June from 51.2 in May, consistent with the fastest improvement in the health of India’s manufacturing economy in the year so far.
This is the 11th consecutive month that the manufacturing PMI remained above the 50-point mark. A score above 50 means expansion, while a reading below 50 points toward contraction. According to the survey, the sector’s activity grew at the strongest pace since last December, supported by rise in domestic and export orders.
“India’s manufacturing economy closed the quarter on a solid footing against a backdrop of robust demand conditions, highlighted by the sharpest gains in output and new orders since last December,” said Aashna Dodhia, economist at IHS Markit, which compiles the survey, and author of the report. Furthermore, new orders from international markets rose for the eighth consecutive month, while the rate of expansion accelerated to the fastest pace since February.
There’s good news on the employment front, too. Reflecting stronger demand conditions, manufacturing firms were encouraged to engage in purchasing activity and raise their staffing levels. “On the jobs front, the latest survey data pointed to a healthy labour market, with job creation accelerating to the sharpest since December 2017,” said Dodhia. The report added that the jobs growth was evident across consumption, intermediate and investment goods.
However, input costs faced by Indian manufacturing companies rose in the month under review, thereby stretching the period of inflation to 33 months. “The RBI recently raised interest rates for the first time in four years to contain inflation and stabilise the rupee. However, input cost inflation quickened to the strongest since July 2014 in June, suggesting that the central bank could remain under pressure to tighten monetary policy,” Dodhia added.
To remind you, last month, the apex bank had upped its retail inflation projection by 0.30 per cent and kept the policy stance in the neutral zone, even as it hiked the key rate by 25 basis points to 6.25 per cent.
The report added that panellists had reported that steel and fuel were among the key items that increased in price. Subsequently, firms raised their output charges at the fastest pace since February.
According to The Hindu Business Line, this index is based on a survey conducted among purchasing executives in over 400 companies, which are divided into eight broad categories: Basic Metals, Chemicals & Plastics, Electrical & Optical, Food & Drink, Mechanical Engineering, Textiles & Clothing, Timber & Paper and Transport.
Meanwhile, despite the strengthening demand conditions, the survey found that business confidence had eased to the weakest level since last October. According to Dodhia, the dip in optimism partly reflected concerns of a potential market slowdown in the year ahead. “Indeed, some of the key challenges to the 12-month outlook include tighter domestic monetary policy and persistently high inflation,” she added.
To conclude on an optimistic note, the report also said that demand conditions are likely to improve over the next year.
Source: BUSINESS TODAY