Steel shipments at Canada-based producer Stelco fell short of the company's guidance in the fourth quarter as Covid-19 infections spread, with the company expecting no improvement in the current quarter.
The steelmaker shipped approximately 625,000 short tons (st) in the fourth quarter, missing its guidance of at least 675,000st, the company said. Stelco struggled with unplanned outages on it hot strip mill, logistical issues, and delays at the end of the fourth quarter caused by the Omicron variant of Covid-19.
Fourth quarter shipments were down by 12pc from 710,000st shipped in the third quarter. Compared with a year earlier, fourth quarter shipments were up by 28pc, and they were down by 1.3pc from two years earlier.
Stelco expects first quarter shipment volumes to be at or below fourth quarter levels, as the company plans to bring forward outages into the first quarter. Matching the fourth quarter would put first quarter shipping volumes 7.4pc below the 675,000st shipped in the first quarter of 2021 and little changed from the 621,000st shipped in the same period of 2020.
The steelmaker is taking outages earlier than expected as prices and demand fall. The latest Covid-19 surge is also presenting labor challenges at the mill and for its customers.
The Argus US hot-rolled coil (HRC) assessment has fallen by 19pc since its peak in mid-September to $1,600/st on 4 January.
Stelco is the latest North American steelmaker to announce outages, with integrated steelmaker US Steel announcing that it will take a 25 day outage at its operational blast furnace in Granite City, Illinois, in March.

