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Peak Pain ‘Has Yet to Come’ for World’s Top Steel Industry

Peak Pain ‘Has Yet to Come’ for World’s Top Steel Industry

(Bloomberg) -- The pain being felt across China’s behemoth steel sector from the coronavirus outbreak is far from over, according to a senior industry analyst, who expects further near-term declines in prices, bulging inventories, and weaker demand before a recovery kicks in after several months.

“The peak of the fundamental pressures has yet to come,” Wang Jianhua, chief steel analyst at Mysteel Research Institute, said in an interview. “While China is beginning to return to work, the rise in steel demand, activity is very limited, and it may take one to two weeks to even see a start in recovery.”

Peak Pain ‘Has Yet to Come’ for World’s Top Steel Industry

The world’s largest steel industry has been roiled by the crisis as an extended break, transport curbs, and quarantine policies threaten to hurt demand. While President Xi Jinping has vowed China will meet economic goals and win the battle against the epidemic, there are multiple signs mills are struggling. The pace of construction -- a key source of steel demand -- has slowed, according to Wang, who has more than 15 years’ experience in the steel industry.

“Demand for construction steel is literally almost at a standstill,” said Wang. After China extended the Lunar New Year break, and with the need for some workers to be quarantined, consumption is set to be affected for a considerable period of time, he said.

The Mysteel Research Institute is part of Mysteel.com, a market intelligence provider on the metals and mining industry. The group -- which offers daily prices as well as industry news -- has more than 3,000 data and news gatherers on the ground across China.

Weaker Prices

So far steel prices have sagged, with mills’ groups including the China Iron & Steel Association warning of transport snarls and weaker demand. The spot price of reinforcement bar -- a benchmark product used in construction -- slumped to 3,832 yuan ($550) a ton on Wednesday, the lowest since May 2017.

The upheaval in China has stoked widespread expectations that the central government will press the pedal on stimulus measures to help Asia’s top economy weather the storm. Potentially that could aid steel. Last year, the nation’s mills turned out more than 50% of worldwide production of the alloy.

Right now plants are facing a multiple challenges, with flows of people, products and raw materials impeded, according to Wang. “Finished steel products cannot be dispatched, and the stocks are piling up massively at mills, warehouses, forcing mills to compress production,” Wang said.

Rebar inventories -- which typically show a steep seasonal build-up at this time of year -- more than doubled in January, according to Beijing Custeel E-commerce Co. They are now at the highest level for early February since 2012.

Not everyone is convinced the outlook is quite as challenging. The worst is now over as China urged some regions to accelerate the restart of activity, according to Wu Wenzhang, founder and president of Shanghai SteelHome E-Commerce Co., a consultancy with about 250,000 registered members.

“It’s blown over now,” Wu said in an interview, highlighting the decline in the daily number of new virus cases. He even expects a shortage of iron ore when mills fully restart production.

China’s mills are the biggest importers of iron ore, with most from top miners including Vale SA, BHP Group, Rio Tinto Group and Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. On Wednesday, most-active futures gained as much as 2.4% to $85.69 a ton in Singapore, rising for the fourth time in five days.

To contact the reporters on this story: Krystal Chia in Singapore at kchia48@bloomberg.net;Annie Lee in Hong Kong at olee42@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Phoebe Sedgman at psedgman2@bloomberg.net, Jake Lloyd-Smith, Alpana Sarma

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.