News Room - Steel Prices

Posted on 07 Feb 2020

Taiwan’s Feng Hsin cuts rebar, scrap prices after holiday

Feng Hsin Steel, Taiwan’s largest rebar producer headquartered in Taichung, Central Taiwan, cut its scrap and rebar prices, both by TWD 300/tonne ($10/t) on January 31 and February 3 respectively, as downstream buyers have been expecting for further price declines amid recent drops in iron ore and scrap prices, a company official confirmed on February 5.

“We have not received many new orders yet since our rebar price cut on Monday, as downstream buyers are waiting to see whether scrap and iron ore prices will slip down further, so now we are just focusing on fulfilling the signed deals,” he said.

With the latest adjustments, the mini-mill’s 13mm dia rebar list price, thus, dipped further to TWD 15,300/t ex-works, and its procurement price for locally-sourced HMS 1&2 80:20 scrap falls further to TWD 7,200/t, Mysteel Global understands from its own recorded data.

As of February 4, Mysteel's 62% Australian Fines SEADEX was at $82.6/dmt CFR Qingdao, down substantially from $95.50/dmt CFR Qingdao as of January 23, the last working day in China before the CNY holiday.

An official from a mini mill in South Taiwan also noted the market hesitation in buying rebar now because of the uncertainties in the global scrap and iron ore prices.

“China’s Novel Coronavirus outbreak has caused concern in Taiwan’s steel market, as we do not know whether or how much more raw material prices will soften in the near term, and secondly, we do not know whether Chinese steel products will try to find the way out to export if the domestic demand does not recover for some time, and that will directly hit rebar producers in Taiwan,” he said.

Feng Hsin Steel, Taiwan’s largest rebar producer headquartered in Taichung, Central Taiwan, cut its scrap and rebar prices, both by TWD 300/tonne ($10/t) on January 31 and February 3 respectively, as downstream buyers have been expecting for further price declines amid recent drops in iron ore and scrap prices, a company official confirmed on February 5.

“We have not received many new orders yet since our rebar price cut on Monday, as downstream buyers are waiting to see whether scrap and iron ore prices will slip down further, so now we are just focusing on fulfilling the signed deals,” he said.

With the latest adjustments, the mini-mill’s 13mm dia rebar list price, thus, dipped further to TWD 15,300/t ex-works, and its procurement price for locally-sourced HMS 1&2 80:20 scrap falls further to TWD 7,200/t, Mysteel Global understands from its own recorded data.

As of February 4, Mysteel's 62% Australian Fines SEADEX was at $82.6/dmt CFR Qingdao, down substantially from $95.50/dmt CFR Qingdao as of January 23, the last working day in China before the CNY holiday.

An official from a mini mill in South Taiwan also noted the market hesitation in buying rebar now because of the uncertainties in the global scrap and iron ore prices.

“China’s Novel Coronavirus outbreak has caused concern in Taiwan’s steel market, as we do not know whether or how much more raw material prices will soften in the near term, and secondly, we do not know whether Chinese steel products will try to find the way out to export if the domestic demand does not recover for some time, and that will directly hit rebar producers in Taiwan,” he said.

 

Source:Mysteel Global