NMDC Ltd has raised iron ore prices by up to 6.72 per cent
20 Mar 2017
With effect from March 14th, 2017, NMDC has raised the prices of iron ore fines by Rs 125-1,985 a tonne. Similarly, the prices of iron ore lumps have been hiked by Rs 125-2,225 a tonne. In its last revision on November 29, the company had raised the prices of fines by Rs 100 a tonne but kept lumps prices unchanged.
“The current iron ore price rise is driven purely by a sharp increase in lifting by primary steel producers. Primary steel mills have raised their production capacity though the demand is very low. Since steel mills have already hinted at raising their products’ prices, NMDC is probably looking to have a pie in the steel price hike,” said Goutam Chakraborty, analyst (institutional research), Emkay Global Financial Services Ltd.
Industry sources say primary steel mills are planning to raise their products’ prices by Rs 3,000 a tonne despite a slow off take by consumer industries.
The housing and construction sector, which accounts for around a third of the steel demand in India, is going through a tough phase. Given the government’s focus on incentivising borrowing from banks for constructing houses, experts expect a rebound in steel consumption.
Meanwhile, the current situation in India is unfavourable for iron and steel as downstream producers are not doing capacity expansion. Sponge iron producers, according to trade sources, are not picking up raw materials in Odisha, resulting in inventories. Similarly, small- and medium-size sponge iron producers in Chhattisgarh have been operating on lower capacities. Hence, their requirement of raw materials including iron ore remains lower.
However, large steel mills have not only compensated for this but also raised their inventories. “NMDC might see sales of 10 million tonnes during the October-December quarter, the highest ever during the third quarter of any financial year,” an analyst said.
Meanwhile, global prices of iron ore remained stable at around $70 a tonne. Hence, more than the global factor, the surge in demand from primary steel producers caused NMDC to raise iron ore prices, said Chakraborty.
Source – business-standard
Leave a Reply
Want to join the discussion?Feel free to contribute!