US hot-rolled coil (HRC) prices stayed flat this week as mills firmed up their repeatable offers into the market.
The Argus US HRC Midwest and southern assessments were both flat at $670/short ton (st) ex-works, the first time since early August that prices remained flat. Overall prices remain down by 44pc from the April peak.
Repeatable levels tightened this week to $660-690/st, as at least one mill unofficially began pushing to increase offers to $700/st. No purchases have been reported at that level, while offers for a couple truckloads were reported between $700-720/st. A service center reported purchasing tens of thousands of tons in the last week at $580-600/st in the Midwest and south, but that level of pricing is believed to now longer be available in the market.
Lead times extended to 5-6 weeks from 4-5 weeks as most steelmakers were said to be into the end of October.
Canadian mills were said to still be offering into Chicago and Detroit at low-$600s/st delivered.
More buyers reported that the bottom of the market could be in sight, with some saying mill breakeven points remain in a range at $600/st and above.
The removal of 1mn st of production through planned maintenance outages and the idling of the remaining blast furnace at US Steel's Granite City, Illinois mill is expected to tighten market supply and help provide a boost to prices should mills attempt to raise them.
On the other side the scrap market is bearish as the targeted strike by the United Auto Workers (UAW) union against the Big 3 automakers continues.
The UAW strike is having limited impacts on steel consumption, but uncertainty created by the union's unpredictable tactics continues to keep some people out of the market.
The HRC import ddp Houston assessment rose by $20/st to $680/st on higher offers from South Korea, the first increase since mid-July. Buying reportedly picked up in the last week as the market in the US firms up and some buyers appear willing to buy imports that will arrive to Houston in late-December or early-January.
Plate
The Argus US plate assessment fell by $20/st to $1,470/st ex-works as buyers reported lower offers from the mills.
Imported plate prices continued to be reported as competitive, and some downstream customers continue to work on switching their discrete plate purchases to coiled plate to take advantage of a price spread that is hundreds of dollars.
Lead times jumped to 6-7 weeks from 3-6 weeks as mills were reported to be solidly into November.
Delivered plate pricing fell by $20/st to $1,510/st.

