This website collects cookies to deliver better user experience. Cookie Policy
Accept
Sign In
The Wall Street Publication
  • Home
  • Trending
  • U.S
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
    • Markets
    • Personal Finance
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Style
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Reading: Steel Market Cools as Supplies Expand
Share
The Wall Street PublicationThe Wall Street Publication
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Home
  • Trending
  • U.S
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Business
    • Economy
    • Real Estate
    • Markets
    • Personal Finance
  • Tech
  • Lifestyle
    • Lifestyle
    • Style
    • Arts
  • Health
  • Sports
  • Entertainment
Have an existing account? Sign In
Follow US
© 2024 The Wall Street Publication. All Rights Reserved.
The Wall Street Publication > Blog > Markets > Steel Market Cools as Supplies Expand
Markets

Steel Market Cools as Supplies Expand

Editorial Board Published January 28, 2022
Share
Steel Market Cools as Supplies Expand
SHARE

The red-hot steel market is cooling.

Contents
Bill Adler, president of Stripmatic Products Inc., said steel is the Cleveland-based company’s largest expense.Tennsco Corp.’s factory in Dickson, Tenn. Lower prices for imported steel are attracting some manufacturers, such as Tennsco, to the import market after years of staying away.

Prices for steel have fallen from last year’s record levels as expanding supplies exceed demand for the first time in more than a year, according to steel-industry analysts and company executives. Steel production in the U.S. rose by 19% last year from 2020, as surging demand followed Covid-19-related shutdowns of mills and depleted the country’s steel supply.

Though prices remain high, executives say the drop is a relief for manufacturers and construction firms after months of panic buying and low inventories made U.S. steel the most expensive in the world last year. For U.S. steelmakers, though, sliding prices pose a risk with new steel plants under construction, potentially adding millions of tons of annual steel production over the next two years.

Since late September, when the spot-market price for hot-rolled sheet steel reached a record $1,960 a ton, prices have fallen by more than one-third, according to S&P Global Platts. The decline has accelerated since the start of December, falling by $480 to a recent $1,270 a ton, a level last seen in March 2021.

“There’s no longer a hunger to restock steel,” said Jim Barnett, chief executive of Grand Steel Products Inc., a Michigan-based distributor that supplies steel to the automotive, appliance, construction and furniture industries. “That’s had a direct and immediate impact on pricing.”

Steel has been a major source of cost inflation for manufacturers during the past 18 months. Mr. Barnett and others in the industry said they expect prices to continue to fall this year as new mills commence production and more imported steel arrives to fortify inventories.

Bill Adler, president of Stripmatic Products Inc., said steel is the Cleveland-based company’s largest expense.

Photo: Angelo Merendino for The Washington Post/Getty Images

Lower prices will likely take months to flow through supply chains, since many manufacturers purchase steel through fixed-price contracts, while other costs like semiconductors, transportation and labor remain high.

Bill Adler, president of Cleveland-based Stripmatic Products Inc., said steel is his company’s largest expense, accounting for as much as 70% of the cost of the metal tubing his company makes for the automotive and truck industries. Before the pandemic, he said, steel accounted for about 50% of the tubes’ cost.

“Seeing prices come down is a huge help to us,” Mr. Adler said. Stripmatic has started to offer bids on jobs based on lower steel prices, he said, after losing work last year to foreign-based competitors that could offer price quotes with less expensive steel.

As prices for steel soared last year, imported steel reasserted itself in the U.S. market after being held in check by tariffs in recent years. Lower prices for imported steel—even with tariffs and transportation costs—are attracting some manufacturers to the import market after years of staying away.

“We’ve gotten a little bit of foreign steel. We’re dipping our toe in the water,” said Stuart Speyer, president of Tennsco Corp., a Tennessee-based manufacturer of steel shelves, lockers and file cabinets.

Tennsco Corp.’s factory in Dickson, Tenn. Lower prices for imported steel are attracting some manufacturers, such as Tennsco, to the import market after years of staying away.

Photo: tennsco/Reuters

Imports in 2021 from January through November last year rose 46% from 2020, according to the American Iron and Steel Institute trade group and the U.S. Census Bureau. The Biden Administration’s quota arrangement negotiated last year with the European Union will allow more than 3 million tons of steel a year to enter the U.S. without a tariff beginning this year.

As much as 10 million tons of additional production capacity for flat-rolled steel are expected to enter service in the U.S. by the end of 2024. Nucor Corp. NUE 3.15% , the largest producer of steel in the U.S., is building new mills in Kentucky and West Virginia. United States Steel Corp. is doubling the steelmaking capacity of its Big River Steel operation in Arkansas. Analysts said the latest building spree will test steel executives’ resolve to avoid a market glut by keeping production aligned with demand.

Nucor said Thursday it plans to slowly start newly completed production capacity for more sheet steel at its Gallatin County, Ky., plant over the next couple months.

“We’re going to be disciplined,” Nucor Chief Executive Leon Topalian said. “We’re not going to flood the market just because we want to produce the steel out of Gallatin.”

Steel Dynamics Inc. STLD 1.07% CEO Mark Millett said he considers higher steel inventories, rising imports and falling prices as temporary, seasonal market conditions that will soon resolve themselves.

“We don’t see any change in the underlying consumption of steel, nor do we see it happening over the months or quarters ahead,” Mr. Millett told analysts this week. January, he said, has been one of Steel Dynamics’ best months ever in terms of orders for flat-rolled steel.

The Indiana-based company expects to begin producing steel next month at a new mill in Texas that is projected to ship 2 million tons of sheet steel this year. Steelmakers brought about 8 million tons of flat-rolled steel capacity into the U.S. market in the past two years that were largely offset by closing or idling older, higher-cost mills in early 2020. Those moves were criticized by some steel customers who endured long waits for steel this summer.

Steel companies’ continued pursuit of more new mills is undergirded by strong demand for steel during the pandemic, driven by increased spending on goods ranging from refrigerators and pickup trucks to building materials. Industry analysts and steel-company executives said production of consumer goods could accelerate further this year with more semiconductor chips, which held down auto production last year.

Even with steel prices falling, U.S. Steel Corp.’s fourth-quarter net income topped $1 billion, compared with $49 million a year earlier, the company said Thursday. Nucor said its quarterly profit soared to $2.25 billion from $399 million during the same period in 2020, despite a 6% decline in sheet-steel shipments.

Some expect steel prices to stabilize this year, settling at permanently higher levels than in the decade that preceded the Covid-19 outbreak to account for higher demand and rising costs for raw materials such as scrap steel.

“American manufacturers underbuilt and underproduced for years. That may be turning around,” said Jeremy Flack, CEO of Flack Global Metals, a Chicago-based steel distributor. “The price of steel is going to be higher for everything.”

Write to Bob Tita at robert.tita@wsj.com

Copyright ©2022 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8

TAGGED:MarketsPAIDWall Street Publication
Share This Article
Twitter Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Hedge Fund Melvin Lost .8 Billion in a Month. Winning It Back Is Taking a Lot Longer. Hedge Fund Melvin Lost $6.8 Billion in a Month. Winning It Back Is Taking a Lot Longer.
Next Article Elliott Management to Sell Stake in Hong Kong Bank, Ending Activist Campaign Elliott Management to Sell Stake in Hong Kong Bank, Ending Activist Campaign

Editor's Pick

TLI Ranked Highest-Rated 3PL on Google Reviews

TLI Ranked Highest-Rated 3PL on Google Reviews

EXTON, PA — Translogistics, Inc. (TLI), a trailblazer in the 3PL and managed logistics space since its founding in 1994,…

By Editorial Board 12 Min Read
Jill On Cash: Shoppers really feel the warmth amid Fed assembly
Jill On Cash: Shoppers really feel the warmth amid Fed assembly

At its current coverage assembly, the Federal Reserve opted to carry brief…

5 Min Read
Justin Baldoni Shares Emotional Message Amid Blake Vigorous Lawsuit
Justin Baldoni Shares Emotional Message Amid Blake Vigorous Lawsuit

Studying Time: 3 minutes Justin Baldoni has damaged his silence. In a…

5 Min Read

Oponion

U.S. has to win in Europe to turn tide in Ryder Cup

U.S. has to win in Europe to turn tide in Ryder Cup

SHEBOYGAN, Wis. — Europe had players who weren’t even born…

September 28, 2021

Expensive Abby: She hides me from her ex. Ought to I be fearful?

DEAR ABBY: My spouse died 5…

March 13, 2025

The EV Rivals Aiming for Tesla’s Crown in China

FILE PHOTO: A Tesla car pictured…

November 12, 2022

#1 Haircut For Males: Versatile Information for 2024 | Fashion

The number one haircut is an…

October 14, 2024

Democrats backing away from Manhattan DA’s new soft-on-crime approach

Congressional Democrats from New York are…

January 17, 2022

You Might Also Like

Boeing, GE and Trump’s Center East journey to recollect
Markets

Boeing, GE and Trump’s Center East journey to recollect

Boeing CEO Kelly Ortberg and Larry Culp, CEO of GE Aerospace, thanked President Donald Trump for serving to dealer a…

5 Min Read
Verizon ends DEI applications, range targets because it seeks approval for Frontier acquisition
Markets

Verizon ends DEI applications, range targets because it seeks approval for Frontier acquisition

Azoria CEO James Fishback discusses corporations rolling again their DEI initiatives on ‘The Bottom Line.’ Verizon Communications on Friday mentioned…

4 Min Read
Chili’s throws severe shade at TGI Friday’s over mozzarella stick dig
Markets

Chili’s throws severe shade at TGI Friday’s over mozzarella stick dig

TGI Fridays CEO explains how the corporate is making a comeback after submitting for chapter in 2024. Two widespread restaurant…

5 Min Read
Coinbase estimates cyberattack might value crypto trade as much as 0M
Markets

Coinbase estimates cyberattack might value crypto trade as much as $400M

Coinbase’s chief authorized officer Paul Grewal discusses how the U.S. Securities and Alternate Fee has stated it intends to drop…

3 Min Read
The Wall Street Publication

About Us

The Wall Street Publication, a distinguished part of the Enspirers News Group, stands as a beacon of excellence in journalism. Committed to delivering unfiltered global news, we pride ourselves on our trusted coverage of Politics, Business, Technology, and more.

Company

  • About Us
  • Newsroom Policies & Standards
  • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Careers
  • Media & Community Relations
  • WP Creative Group
  • Accessibility Statement

Contact

  • Contact Us
  • Contact Customer Care
  • Advertise
  • Licensing & Syndication
  • Request a Correction
  • Contact the Newsroom
  • Send a News Tip
  • Report a Vulnerability

Term of Use

  • Digital Products Terms of Sale
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookie Settings
  • Submissions & Discussion Policy
  • RSS Terms of Service
  • Ad Choices

© 2024 The Wall Street Publication. All Rights Reserved.

Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?