WRITE for ATol ADVERTISE MEDIA KIT GET ATol BY EMAIL ABOUT ATol CONTACT US
WSI
Asia Time Online - Daily News
             
Asia Times Chinese
AT Chinese



    Greater China
     Aug 3, 2005
Revaluation set to boost China's steel industry

BEIJING - China's steel industry, the largest in the world, will benefit from a stronger yuan, according to industry officials and analysts. However, the industry is now bidding farewell to its low-cost era.

The yuan's recent 2.1% appreciation will cut costs of imported materials, iron ore in particular, by 3 billion yuan (US$369.9 million) this year, according to Qi Xiangdong, deputy secretary-general of China Iron and Steel Association. According to the current iron ore CIF (cost, insurance and freight) prices, Qi said, the steel sector is expected to save up to 2.5 billion yuan this year due to the stronger yuan. China's iron ore imports will total 240 million tons this year, he said. From January to June, the nation imported 131 million tons of iron ore, up 33.4% from last year. The yuan's appreciation could also lower the import costs of scrap steel and coking coal by some 500 million yuan this year, Qi said. Scrap steel and coking coal imports will total 10 million tons this year.

Zhou Xizeng, an analyst with CITIC Securities Co Ltd, told China Daily that the steel sector will gain an extra 4% growth in profits this year as a result of the stronger yuan. "The yuan's appreciation will have a positive impact on our steel sector in general, as China's imports of steel products and related materials remain much larger than exports," Zhou said. China imported $35.7 billion of steel products and related materials last year, compared with $13.3 billion of exports, according to Zhou.

However, Luo Bingsheng, vice-chairman of the steel association, indicated that despite the stronger yuan, the steel sector has already "said good-bye" to a low-cost era, due to the mounting cost of raw materials. The average cost of steel production in China will rise by around 15% per ton this year compared with last year, Luo said. "This situation indicates that China is accelerating its pace in turning into a strong steel producing nation from merely being a big one," said Luo.

He predicted China's total steel output will reach 330 million tons this year, up from 273 million tons last year. The nation's steel output grew by 28.3% to 164.9 million tons in the first half of this year compared with the same period last year. The steel sector's profit margins are shrinking due to rising material costs and sagging finished steel prices, Luo added.

Profits of China's top 68 steel makers grew by 27.2% year-on-year to 49.2 billion yuan in the first half of this year, according to statistics from the steel association. But the profit growth was down 37.6% from 2004. Earlier this year, BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and Companhia Vale do Rio Doce, which collectively account for more than 75% of global iron ore production and trade, increased their iron ore prices by 71.5% for 2005. Currently, the average CIF price of iron ore in China stands at $60 a ton.

The average steel price in China tumbled by 10.5% from March to June of this year due to an oversupply in the domestic steel market, statistics showed. Qi said domestic steel prices will not fluctuate dramatically from their current levels in the second half of this year.

CITIC's Zhou said China's dipping steel imports are unlikely to rebound strongly in the second half of this year because international steel prices remain much higher than those in the domestic market, despite the yuan's appreciation. On average, by the end of June, international steel prices were 9.5% higher than domestic prices. China's imports of steel products declined by 26.8% year-on-year to 11.6 million tons in the first half of this year, statistics showed. Luo said China will import 24-25 million tons of steel products this year, down from 29.3 million tons in 2004.

(Asia Pulse/XIC)


China to ban foreign companies from owning steel firms (Jul 16, '05)

Steel industry set for tough times (Jul 15, '05)

China to allow more foreign investment in steel (Apr 29, '05)

The Olympic effect on Indian steel (Mar 16, '04)

Beijing talks tough in steel war (Mar 21, '02)

Chinese market steels itself for giant listing (Nov 9, '00)


 
 



All material on this website is copyright and may not be republished in any form without written permission.
© Copyright 1999 - 2005 Asia Times Online Ltd.
Head Office: Rm 202, Hau Fook Mansion, No. 8 Hau Fook St., Kowloon, Hong Kong
Thailand Bureau: 11/13 Petchkasem Road, Hua Hin, Prachuab Kirikhan, Thailand 77110