Oman Daily Observer

*How Seoul’s US trade ‘coup’ left Korea steel in limbo

- JANE CHUNG AND YUKA OBAYASHI

As much as half of output capacity at some specialty South Korean steelmaker­s has ground to a standstill as an exemption to US import tariffs they first hailed as a Seoul diplomatic coup turns out to be a quota bottleneck. Production lines are standing idle, people with knowledge of the matter say, even as data shows Japanese steel pipe makers have expanded US exports despite having to cope with 25 per cent tariffs. Japanese players have been boosted by offering high-tech pipes for the US oil industry amid an output boom that can’t be easily substitute­d by US manufactur­ers, unlike Korean firms’ goods.

South Korea was the first country to score the exemption back in March, agreed as President Donald Trump set out to level the manufactur­ing playing field with the rest of the world. The deal meant continued, tariff-free access to Korean steel’s 3rd-biggest export market.

But what should have been a boon for specialty pipe exporters like Nexteel, Husteel and Seah Steel turned bust: The quota for 2018, set nearly a third below previous years’ volumes, was almost already used up by May when the new system kicked in, leaving Nexteel and Husteel forced to reduce factory run rates until October and November, when they can resume Usbound shipments for 2019.

Some, like Seah Steel, are now considerin­g investing more in small US production bases to beat quotas and tariffs alike. But meantime the US Commerce Department says imports of pipes and tube products from Japan climbed nearly 50 per cent in volume in January-july this year, compared with a year earlier — while imports from South Korea slid 18 per cent.

“If the United States goes easy on Mexico and Canada (in trade policy), South Korea’s imports may be a burden to them and for that reason, they could trim quotas,” said Wonmog Choi, professor of trade law at Ewha Womans University. “We should realise that we’re sandwiched between them.”

South Korea’s overall steel exports easily outstrip Japan’s by volume: Even capped by the quota, 2.63 million tonnes of Korean steel can be shipped to the United States this year, well ahead of the 1.73 million tonnes exported by Japan in 2017, US data shows.

Top Korean steelmaker­s POSCO and Hyundai Steel were not hit as hard by the quotas since the United States accounts for less than 5 per cent of their total sales. For smaller players like Husteel, Nexteel and Seah Steel the US market is vital — 70 per cent of their exports go there.

President Trump on August 29 offered the prospect of future relief to nations with quotas including South Korea, saying they could apply for product exemptions.

But exporters to the United States without operationa­l bases there cannot apply directly for exemptions — they are reliant on US customers seeking permits for more imports, rendering the process more time-consuming and complex.

In the meantime, an official at one pipe maker said one of the company’s five factories has been idled until later this year.

“Our run rates have lowered almost by half,” said the official, who asked not to be named due to the sensitivit­y of the matter. He said his firm is considerin­g moving one or two plants to the United States to skirt the quota.

A Seah Steel official, who declined to be named due to company policy, said, “We were relatively hit less hard by quotas because we have two US plants... In the mid- and long-term, we’re considerin­g expanding production capacity in the United States.”

The US Department of Commerce’s Internatio­nal Trade Administra­tion website, using data from IHS Markitglob­al Trade Atlas sourced from the reporting country’s official statistics, shows the value of Japanese pipe and tube exports to the United States rocketed 84 per cent in January-july compared with a year earlier, to $190 million.

Korean shipments were worth $831 million — but up a measly 2.6 per cent.

Like Seah Steel, Japanese majors have US output that cushions the blow of tariffs or imports.

“Our US production capacity of about 7.1 million tonnes is far greater than our export to the US, which were about 600,000 tonnes last year,” said Katsuhiro Miyamoto, executive vicepresid­ent at top Japanese steelmaker Nippon Steel & Sumitomo Metal Corp.

But with both their overall US exports declining by volume, South Korea and Japan have ramped up shipments to growth markets like India, as steelmaker­s sought out new clients — and tapped into higher global prices stoked by uncertaint­ies over global trade rows with the United States.

The price rises have left some in Korea ruing the US export quota even more, and wishing for tariffs instead.

* No US import tariffs for South Korea, but strict quota * Some specialty firms idle production lines * High-tech Japanese pipes in demand

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