US CR prices down, imports close margin - Steel Market Update

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Oct 15, 2024

US CR prices down, imports close margin - Steel Market Update

International Steel Prices Written by David Schollaert October 11, 2024 Share on LinkedIn The price gap between US-produced cold-rolled (CR) coil and offshore products narrowed slightly again in the

International Steel Prices

Written by David Schollaert

October 11, 2024

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The price gap between US-produced cold-rolled (CR) coil and offshore products narrowed slightly again in the week ended Oct. 11, mainly due to a stateside price cut.

While domestic CR coil tags remain higher than offshore prices on a landed basis, the premium tightened a bit. US prices edged back down week on week (w/w), though offshore tags were mixed.

US CR coil prices averaged $940 per short ton (st) in our check of the market on Tuesday, Oct. 8, down $20/st vs. the prior week. Despite some recent gains, CR tags slipped this past week, now down roughly $385/st from the year-to-date high of $1,325/st in January.

Domestic CR prices are, theoretically, 20% more expensive than imports. That’s down from 23% last week and 31.5% in early January.

In dollar-per-ton terms, US CR is now, on average, $152/st more expensive than offshore products (see Figure 1). That’s down $24/st from last week and is still well below a recent peak of $311/st in mid-January.

The charts below compare CR coil prices in the US, Germany, Italy, South Korea, and Japan. The left-hand side shows prices over the last two years. The right-hand side zooms in to highlight more recent trends.

This is how SMU calculates the theoretical spread between domestic CR prices (FOB domestic mills) and foreign CR prices (delivered to US ports): We compare SMU’s US CR weekly index to the CRU CR weekly indices for Germany, Italy, and East Asia (Japan and South Korea). This is only a theoretical calculation. Import costs can vary greatly, influencing the true market spread.

We add $90/st to all foreign prices as a rough means of accounting for freight costs, handling, and trader margin. This gives us an approximate CIF US ports price to compare to the SMU domestic CR price. Buyers should use our $90/st figure as a benchmark and adjust up or down based on their own shipping and handling costs. (Editor’s note: If you import steel and want to share your thoughts on these costs, please get in touch with the author at [email protected].)

As of Thursday, Oct. 10, the CRU Asian CR price was $549/st, up $14/st w/w and ~$59/st higher than a month ago. Adding a 71% antidumping duty (Japan, theoretical) and $90/st in estimated import costs, the delivered price to the US is $1,029/st. The theoretical price of South Korean CR exports to the US is $639/st.

As noted above, the latest SMU CR price is $940/st on average, which puts US-produced CR theoretically $89/st below CR product imported from Japan but $301/st above CR imported from South Korea.

Italian CR prices were down $10/st to ~$650/st this week. After adding import costs, the price of Italian CR delivered to the US is, in theory, $740/st.

That means domestic CR is theoretically $200/st more expensive than CR coil imported from Italy. The spread is up $10/st from last week but is still more $250/st below a recent high of $453/st mid-December.

CRU’s German CR price was down $13/st vs. the previous week. After adding import costs, the delivered price of German CR is, in theory, $743/st.

The result: Domestic CR is theoretically $197/st more expensive than CR imported from Germany. The spread is $7/st lower w/w but still well below a recent high of $428/st in the first week of 2024.

David Schollaert is a senior analyst for Steel Market Update. David joined SMU after more than a decade in the metals and mining industry in a myriad of different roles. Much of his early experience and expertise were within the coverage and analysis of steel-making raw materials and served previously as senior editor of the CRU Prices Service. Most recently, however, before his return to market analysis, David held roles as a metals buyer and an operations manager for raw material suppliers. Based in CRU’s Pittsburgh office, David can be reached at [email protected] or 724-720-1008.

US hot-rolled (HR) coil prices slipped this past week but remain marginally higher than offshore material on a landed basis.

The price gap between US-produced cold-rolled (CR) coil and offshore products narrowed slightly in the week ended Oct. 4, mainly due to a price jump in Asian markets.

US hot-rolled (HR) coil prices moved slightly higher again this past week but remain marginally higher than offshore material on a landed basis. Since reaching parity with import prices in late August, domestic prices have been slowly pulling ahead of imports. This has been driven by a slight deviation in price movements – slow but […]

The price gap between US cold-rolled (CR) coil and offshore product has shrunk slightly this week ended Sept. 27 as stateside tags edged down. The premium slipped moderately but remains well ahead of the 10-month low from late July.

Written by David Schollaert October 11, 2024Figure 1