Global Times

Shanghai steel futures hover near 4- year peak

Chinese mills expect margins to remain strong in Q4: trader

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Chinese rebar steel futures hovered near their strongest level in more than four years Thursday, supported by firm demand and tighter supply following the country’s clampdown on low- grade steel production.

The sustained strength in the steel market could keep profit margins at Chinese producers high through the end of the year, traders said, adding it should spur appetite for raw material iron ore.

The most- active rebar on the Shanghai Futures Exchange was up 2 percent at 3,775 yuan ($ 561) a ton during the afternoon trading. The constructi­on steel product hit 3,759 yuan on Tuesday, its loftiest since September 2013.

“Almost all mills in China enjoyed good profits in the past month and people are expecting profit margins to continue to be strong toward the fourth quarter,” said a Shanghai- based trader.

Chinese constructi­on steel producers are seeing their best profits in years, powered by the government’s infrastruc­ture push as well as a crackdown on producers of low- quality steel or those that used induction furnaces.

China had shut production of all highly polluting low- end steel products at the end of June and has said it will send inspection teams this month to make sure they won’t reopen.

The closures have helped tighten rebar supply in China. Analysts have estimated induction furnaces produced about 50 million tons of rebar last year – about a quarter of China’s total rebar output.

“The market has become tighter and the feedback from mills is that they have plenty of orders and they have no problem selling steel products,” the Shanghai trader said.

The price of raw material iron ore also rose, with the most- traded iron ore for January delivery on the Dalian Commodity Exchange up 0.6 percent at 544 yuan a ton. It touched 582 yuan on Tuesday, its highest since March 24.

Iron ore for delivery to China’s Qingdao port fell 1.7 percent to $ 72.30 a ton on Wednesday, retreating for a second straight day, according to Metal Bulletin.

The spot benchmark hit $ 73.70 a ton Monday, its highest since April 11.

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