Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Shortage of steel rods hits home constructi­on

- Tanya Thomas tanya.t@livemint.com

MUMBAI: Housing and constructi­on projects outside urban markets are staring at a slow down for a few months, with dealers and buyers reporting a shortage of long steel products.

Constructi­on steel, mostly produced by small, secondary steel mills scattered across the southern and eastern regions, has been in short supply as many MSMES struggle to emerge from the effects of the pandemic on labour and capital as well as sky-high iron-ore prices.

The key reason for the shortage appears to be linked to a scarcity of iron ore in the local market. NMDC Ltd, the state-run primary ore miner that steel mills depend on, raised the price of iron ore lumps from ₹1,960 a tonne in June to ₹4,610 in December, a 135% increase over six months.

Meanwhile, NMDC’S average monthly iron ore production declined 27% from the year earlier during April-november 2020 to 13.81 tonnes. About 1.6 tonnes of iron ore are required to produce a tonne of steel. Iron ore prices are moving in tandem with the global trend, which is rising to meet China’s stimulusdr­iven appetite for steel. This has led miners across the world, including India, to increase steel exports.

n India, however, constructi­on steel producers, who are mostly medium-sized enterprise­s making unbranded TMT (thermo mechanical treatment) bars and rebars at plants of under 2 million tonne per annum capacity, are unable to keep up with rising iron ore prices. Neither do they have the market dominance to impose similar price hikes on their products.

RK Goyal, managing director, Kalyani Steel and vice-president of Karnataka Iron and Steel Manufactur­ers’ Associatio­n, said while flat steel firms have been able to negotiate higher prices from customers, particular­ly automakers, long steel suppliers haven’t been able to do so. “We haven’t had a price hike in three months from auto OEMS (original equipment makers). With iron ore prices going up and no increase in the selling price of steel, smaller mills are choosing not to produce as much. There has been no correspond­ing increase in steel price to make up for rising input costs.”

“Rolling mills used to produce 45% of total long steel but now they are able to produce 30-32% of market demand,” V R Sharma, managing director, Jindal Steel and Power Ltd, told Mint. “Most large players like us are running at full capacity; we used to produce 55% of market demand, now that’s gone up to as much as 60%. Larger players cannot produce more.”

Analysts say the shortage is being felt acutely in non-urban markets, where large integrated steel mills do not have a marketing presence, and where building projects may be delayed.

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