Air Freight News

China slashes steel output as industry rings alarm on demand

Chinese steelmakers slashed output last month as woeful demand forced steep cuts on an industry contending with a collapse in margins.

Steel production in July plunged about 9% on both the month and the year to 82.94 million tons, the lowest figure reported in 2024, according to the statistics bureau on Thursday. That leaves the total over the first seven months at 613.72 million tons, 2.2% off last year’s pace.

The protracted downturn in the real estate market and shrinking factory activity have pushed domestic prices sharply lower, and inflamed trade tensions by unleashing a flood of Chinese metal onto world markets. The nation’s top steelmaker warned on Wednesday that the industry is facing a crisis more severe than the downturns of 2008 and 2015.

“Output usually falls during the summer demand lull, constrained by heat and rains, but July’s plunge is steeper-than-expected,” said Xu Xiangchun, an analyst with Mysteel Global, who expects production to drop further in August.

“Market sentiment is really bearish,” he said. “Mills are losing money across the industry, but steel prices are not showing signs of stabilizing.”

There’s been little respite from the bad news emanating from the property sector. Construction starts are the steel market’s main pillar of demand, but new home sales are in a prolonged funk and foreclosures are mounting, offering few incentives for developers to build afresh. Home prices continued to fall in July, albeit at a slightly slower pace, the statistics bureau said.

At the same time, the government has been unwilling to offset the weakness by ramping up spending on infrastructure, which has helped rescue the market during previous downturns. The upshot is that Chinese steel consumption may contract as much as 3% in 2024 following a similar decline last year, according to Bloomberg Intelligence.

Stricter quality requirements on some products, including rebar used in construction, has probably amplified the cuts to production. The new government standards come into effect on Sept. 25, incentivizing mills to limit output and clear stockpiles of older material before it becomes obsolete.

The steel industry has been plagued by overcapacity for years. In an effort to rein in emissions, Beijing has been trying to cap production at or below the previous year’s level after output ballooned in 2020 to well over 1 billion tons. That task is likely to be easier this year as supply discipline is forced on mills looking to buttress their margins. It could also offer some relief to the countries grappling with the impact of cheap Chinese exports on their domestic markets.

Other Commodities Data

China’s oil refiners face a similar set of challenges from slowing growth, the property crisis and Beijing’s pivot from the old economy to the new. The industry’s first-half profits dropped over 90% and segments from plastics to diesel and gasoline are all struggling as demand weakens and the switch to clean energy gathers steam. 

  • That’s pressured refining rates, with output dropping 6.1% year-on-year to 59.06 million tons in July.
  • Thermal power dropped for a third consecutive month, falling 4.9% in July, as heavy rains lifted the contribution from hydroelectricity. Growth in wind and solar output slowed. Solar cell production fell for a second month after a plunge in prices below cost forced more factories to halt operations.
  • Aluminum output hit a record for a third straight month after smelters ramped up production in hydro-rich Yunnan province and new capacity was added in Inner Mongolia.
  • Coal and natural gas production rose to meet peak summer demand. China’s mission to cut its dependence on imports also saw crude oil output increase.
Bloomberg
Bloomberg

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© Bloomberg
The author’s opinion are not necessarily the opinions of the American Journal of Transportation (AJOT).

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