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Viewpoint: US steel tariffs cause scrap supply glut

  • Market: Metals
  • 24/12/25

North American ferrous scrap dealers and exporters will likely continue flooding the US market in 2026 because the tariff-protected US steel industry is on track to outcompete international markets for scrap.

The magnetic pull of the US steel market this year attracted greater volumes of ferrous scrap deliveries from domestic and international shippers alike, in a trend that could keep bolstering US scrap supply and weighing on prices in 2026.

"The tariffs are protecting US steel and aluminum industries and therefore domestic demand for scrap," said Stephen Mikkelsen, chief executive of global metals recycler Sims Metal during an August earnings call. "This has resulted in premiums often emerging for domestic scrap sales in the US."

President Donald Trump's 50pc tariffs on imported steel have helped ramp up US steel mills' operating rates. The import tax has also guarded the US market from an oversupply of Chinese steel in the global marketplace. That dynamic has encouraged dealers to sell ferrous scrap — which does not face a tariff — increasingly to US steel mills rather than the seaborne market.

"We see this continuing in fiscal year 2026. In our view, production changes will take time to play out, and China will continue to dampen steel prices, and therefore, ferrous scrap prices outside the US," Mikkelsen added.

The recent divergence of US and Turkish steel prices signals that US exporters could continue to prefer selling into the domestic market in the first quarter. US flat and long steel prices have continued to climb in December. Turkish rebar has decreased to $559/t ex-works, an $18.50/t decrease since 4 December.

US ferrous scrap market participants expect prices to edge up in January based on slower supply flows in the winter season. But the long-term trend of steel tariffs fueling higher ferrous scrap supply in the US will likely persist in 2026 and keep preventing major price increases.

Trump has shown no interest in nixing the steel tariffs, likely indicating that the US market will continue attracting similar or larger volumes of scrap from domestic and international sources in 2026.

The first of two price increases scrap dealers got this year came when winter weather curbed supply flows nine months ago. The second came this month under the same circumstance.

Sellers craved stronger demand from US steel mills to lift markets in early 2025. They got their wish when Trump doubled US steel tariffs to 50pc in June.

US steel mill utilization rates jumped by 4pc to higher than 79pc in the summer. The stronger run rates equated to hundreds of thousands of metric tonnes (t) of additional monthly demand for scrap.

US exporters shift sales to domestic mills

US exporters diverted scrap sales — particularly shredded scrap — to US steel mills to help fill that extra demand.

US scrap exports are on track to fall by 15pc to 11.7mn t this year, the lowest sum since 2016, according to annualized US customs data pending the releases for the final three months of the year, which were delayed by the federal government shutdown.

US scrap imports have also risen, particularly from Mexico and Canada, because US steel tariffs have lessened demand for scrap in those countries. US ferrous scrap import volumes are on course to total 4.1mn t this year, a 10pc increase from 2024.

The extra scrap supply in the US has prevented scrap prices from raising proportionally with steel.

#1 busheling, a key feedstock for hot-rolled coil, averaged $390/gross ton (gt) this month, a 4pc increase from a year earlier. But US hot-rolled coil was $922/short ton (st) this week, a 38pc uptick during that time.

Shredded scrap, a major part of melt mixes for rebar, was $378/gt on average in December, up by 5pc from a year earlier. Rebar rose by 23pc to $915/st in the past year.

US ferrous scrap and iron metallic import/export swingst
20252024±±%
Imports
Ferrous scrap4,109,6333,750,091359,5429.6
Pig iron5,443,3074,713,161730,14615.5
DRI/HBI1,562,0731,525,15936,9142.4
Exports
Ferrous scrap11,666,18713,876,316-2,210,129-15.9
Net change in iron units in US3,336,731

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