Taipei Times

China Steel to maintain prices

- BY CHEN CHENG-HUI STAFF REPORTER

China Steel Corp (中鋼) yesterday said it would keep domestic steel prices for deliveries unchanged for the second month in a row next month.

The nation’s largest steelmaker said in a statement that it had accounted for customers’ export competitiv­eness when making the decision, as the regional steel market is still in consolidat­ion mode.

The global manufactur­ing industry has been recovering steadily this year and interest rates are unlikely to remain high for much longer, developmen­ts that would likely boost steel demand going forward, China Steel said.

Economies in Europe and the US are stabilizin­g, with the European steel market showing signs of a recovery and steel prices in the US rising over the past few months, boding well for export-reliant countries in Asia, the company said.

The World Steel Associatio­n estimated that global steel demand this year would grow 1.7 percent year-on-year, or an annual increase of about 30.1 million tonnes, while the IMF forecast that the global economy would grow 3.1 percent this year, China Steel said.

However, prices of key raw materials have stayed solidly above the 10-year average, with iron ore returning to US$100 to US$110 per tonne and coking coal remaining at US$220 to US$230 per tonne, the company said.

While the overall steel market is expected to improve sequential­ly in the coming quarters, based on current supply-demand dynamics, China Steel said that China’s unfair trade practices have harmed the global economy, and the country’s excess production of cheap steel products has severely damaged steel industries worldwide.

Last year, China exported 630,000 tonnes of hot-rolled and cold-rolled steel products to Taiwan, an increase of 60 percent from a year earlier that has negatively affected local steel producers, the company said.

China Steel said it is collecting data and informatio­n related to Chinese firms’ dumping practices and would implement necessary relief measures to help safeguard the domestic steel industry, after several countries, including Brazil, Indonesia, Thailand, Turkey and Vietnam, filed anti-dumping complaints against steel products from China.

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