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Turkey ferrous: Price falls, China and iron ore firmer

  • : Metals
  • 21/03/11

The Turkish scrap import price weakened today as rebar producers looked to capitalise on the ample supply of scrap currently available on the market and the absence of flat steel producers, while global steel market demand remained relatively strong.

The Argus daily steel scrap HMS 1/2 80:20 cfr Turkey assessment fell by $5/t to $440/t. Mills' bid indications remained at $435/t cfr Turkey for premium HMS 1/2 80:20, while Russian and continental European scrap suppliers offered at $445/t and $440/t cfr for their respective HMS 1/2 80:20 qualities.

The rebound in Chinese domestic rebar prices today, as inventories recorded their largest weekly decrease since the lunar new year, and anticipated restocking demand to come from Turkey's domestic rebar market before the Ramadan period begins, puts mills in an advantageous position for the rest of this month, now that they have received scrap offers $20/t lower than on 5 March. And Chinese rebar exporters did not drop fob offers when domestic steel and iron ore prices fell earlier this week. Argus' ICX 62pc iron ore index rose by $6.20/dmt to $170.55/dmt cfr Qingdao today. Chinese rebar futures rallied significantly to close Yn200/t higher than yesterday.

Deep-sea scrap availability for end-of-March to end-of-April shipment is estimated to slightly outweigh the number of cargoes needed by Turkish mills for this period, although it is the timing of so many offers indicated to Turkish mills all at once that seems to have put significant downward pressure on the price today. But at the same time, obsolete scrap flows are likely to increase through to April owing to warmer weather and higher domestic delivered to mill prices, which may be encouraging scrap exporters to sell cargoes today.

Turkish rebar producers look to be able to afford the risk of attempting to push scrap import prices down this week, because they are not expected to make any substantial rebar sales this week, and the eight deep-sea cargoes that two flat steel producers have bought since 23 February indicates little near-term demand from them.

But the significant depreciation of the lira against the US dollar since the last period of strong Turkish domestic rebar restocking in mid-February — when the exchange rate hovered around TL7:$1 — is likely to mean that mills will have to accept slightly lower dollar-equivalent prices from stockists when demand returns again this month. Traders were selling $10-15/t lower than mills' offer levels today. The lira has been volatile this week, in a TL7.44-TL7.77:$1 range, although it reached its most appreciated level at TL7.44:$1 today.

The Argus weekly Turkish domestic steel rebar assessment fell by TL60/t to TL5,600/t ex-works including value-added tax (VAT) today, equivalent to $637/t ex-works excluding VAT, down by $6.90/t on the week.

Low scrap import demand from Latin America last week appears to have been temporary, as two enquiries came from Mexico yesterday, with one from Peru and one from Brazil today, for April shipment. Re-emerging demand from other import markets could coincide with Turkish demand when Turkey begins to buy again, which is likely to start from next week. Demand has emerged from Italy, Morocco, Spain and Egypt since 5 February.

The majority of continental European exporters are pushing dockside sub-suppliers for lower prices, but so far any bid indications for HMS 1/2 material at €315-320/t delivered to dock have been unsuccessful because of strong demand from domestic mills, particularly for prime-grade scrap. The euro strengthened against the US dollar today at just above €1.19:$1, alleviating Turkish mills' arguments for much lower scrap import prices.

Several short-sea cargoes traded on 9 March, but demand was weak today and yesterday given the prompt acceptance of lower prices from short-sea sellers. Some sellers today said they are willing to sell at even lower prices, which may be an attempt to push dock prices down when margins have become much tighter.

A Romanian supplier was heard to sell HMS 1/2 80:20 at $421/t cif Nemrut Bay, while a Ukrainian supplier was heard to sell HMS 1/2 90:10 at $435/t cif Marmara on 9 March. A Yeysk-origin cargo and a Rostov-origin cargo were also heard sold to a Marmara mill on the same day.

The Argus daily A3 cif Marmara steel scrap assessment decreased by $10/t to $415/t cif on lower bid-offer indications today.


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