Global Times

Steel prices up as China reaffirms economic support

▶ Environmen­t ministry reiterates efforts to combat air pollution

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China’s constructi­on steel rebar prices edged higher on Thursday after three straight sessions of declines, as a top decisionma­king body of the Communist Party vowed to support the economy in the face of increasing pressures.

The politburo said on Wednesday it will take more timely steps to support its economy and will stabilize employment, finance, foreign trade and investment, reaffirmin­g a proactive fiscal policy and prudent monetary policy.

“The politburo’s promises will help buoy market expectatio­n in the long term, but we still need to assess the implementa­tion of actual policies,” CITIC Futures analysts said in a note.

The environmen­t ministry reiterated on Wednesday that China will not relent in its efforts to fight against toxic air pollution even as the economy slows, although it also admitted that the battle is becoming increasing­ly difficult.

The country’s biggest steelmakin­g province, North China’s Hebei Prinvce, has issued a second-level smog alert across 10 major cities, forcing industrial plants to halve their production or even shut down during the alert.

Emergency measures took effect from October 31 until November 5, according to a statement from the provincial government.

Prices were also driven higher by firm profit margins at steel mills.

According to the China Iron and Steel Associatio­n, profits in the steel sector surged 86 percent from January to September this year.

The overall debt-to-asset ratio of its member companies reached 66.11 percent by endSeptemb­er, down 3.91 percentage points from a year earlier, the data showed.

Average profit margins at steel mills are above 1,000 yuan a ton, according to data from Huatai Futures.

Dalian iron ore sipped 0.2 percent to 532 yuan ($76.5) a ton. It gained 8.1 percent last month, its best since November 2017.

The most-traded coking coal futures on the Dalian Commodity Exchange rose 1.7 percent to 1,409.5 yuan a ton, while coke prices gained 0.7 percent to 2,400 yuan a ton.

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