CME EU HRC contract has record day

  • Spanish Market: Metals
  • 21/01/21

US exchange operator CME Group's North European hot-rolled coil contract had a record trading day today, with the equivalent of 11,000t clearing.

The previous record tonnage was 8,000t on 3 September 2020. The contract has a lot size of 20t.

During the morning a January-February spread traded at €5/t (€700/t for January and €695/t for February), in 1,000 t/month. Later, a second quarter-third quarter spread traded at €60/t (Q2 €630/t and Q3 €570/t) in 1,000 t/month, after which a February bid was paid at €680/t for 2,000 t/month. March also printed at €660/t for 1,000 t/month.

These trades meant a steeper backwardation developed, testimony to current market strength and lower forward expectations. February traded at €700/t yesterday, and March at €675/t, €5/t and €25/t higher than today.

Most spot business is being concluded for April-June at present, with mills offering over €700/t for the most part, and buyers have paid this level for physical quarterly contracts. This makes the €630/t Q2 futures trade a very attractive price for buyers wishing to lock in for second-quarter bookings. Even cheaper imports, offered mostly for late in the second quarter, are currently substantially above this level. Argus' underlying northwest EU HRC index was €710.50/t yesterday, while cold-rolled prices are closer to €800-820/t.

Lower forward pricing is unsurprising given the softening in scrap and Asian prices, and the increase in import offers. It could also be factoring in the potential for the European safeguard lapsing in June, although some European member states are pushing for a review and extension.


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03/05/24

Australia's WesCEF to pursue Li plans despite hurdles

Australia's WesCEF to pursue Li plans despite hurdles

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Nippon Steel delays timeline to acquire US Steel


03/05/24
03/05/24

Nippon Steel delays timeline to acquire US Steel

Tokyo, 3 May (Argus) — Japan's Nippon Steel has extended the scheduled timing of its US Steel acquisition completion until the end of the year, following a request by US authorities to submit more documentation, postponing an original plan of closing the deal by September at the latest. Nippon Steel will take more time to complete its $15bn deal to buy US Steel , as the Japanese firm received from the US Department of Justice a "second request" on submitting further documents necessary for the approval procedure. The deal was initially scheduled to close during April-September but is postponed to sometime during July-December, the Japanese firm announced on 3 May. Nippon Steel received the additional request in April, according to a company representative who spoke to Argus, without disclosing the specific date. The company anticipated the possibility of additional requirements, he added. The acquisition procedure may not finish before the US presidential election in November. Both the Democratic and the Republican party candidates repeatedly and vocally have opposed the deal , with incumbent US President Joe Biden pledging that a fellow American steel producer will be "American owned, American operated by American union steel workers". Nippon Steel is confident that its acquisition plan will eventually clear regulatory hurdles with "fair and objective judgement" from the US authorities, the representative added. By Yusuke Maekawa Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Japan's trading firms see metals prices cutting profits


02/05/24
02/05/24

Japan's trading firms see metals prices cutting profits

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Evion-Metachem Indian project starts producing graphite


02/05/24
02/05/24

Evion-Metachem Indian project starts producing graphite

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US southbound barge demand falls off earlier than usual


01/05/24
01/05/24

US southbound barge demand falls off earlier than usual

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