According to EUROFER's October report entitled "Economic and Steel Market Outlook 2009-2011," the European Union (EU) economy most likely turned the corner during the third quarter of 2009. However, the recovery pencilled in for the coming quarters will be slow and is still surrounded by high levels of uncertainty.
Commenting on the issue, EUROFER director general Gordon Moffat said, "While the economy probably reached a turning point, the EU steel market will remain stuck in slow motion for the time being."
EUROFER states that the prospects for the EU's steel-using sectors, such as the automotive and construction sectors, remain subdued. Despite stabilizing financial markets, financing is still a bottleneck for many companies. Industrial orders are still weak despite some inventory replenishment. The report shows that, while year-on-year output growth should turn positive again in the second quarter of 2010, it could take to 2011 before a more pronounced rebound in output begins.
Meanwhile, the weak activity in the steel-using industries and the sharp destocking in the steel supply chain resulted in steel demand (apparent steel consumption) falling by 45 percent year on year in the first half of 2009 and by almost 32 percent in the third quarter. The inventory situation is now better aligned with the current weak level of steel demand. Some customers returned cautiously to the market to fill gaps in their stocks; this led to the downward trend in orders at EU mills bottoming out.
The stock cycle will also set the stage in 2010. Some inventory build-up following heavy destocking in 2009 will lead to a technical recovery in steel demand, the EUROFER report reads. With a forward view to 2011, it is expected that rising end-user activity should provide a broader basis for steel demand growth.
So far this year, imports have been at much reduced levels compared with 2007 and 2008. However, Moffat warns, "Global crude steel production increasing in anticipation of a recovery in steel demand which yet has to materialize remains a major risk for the EU supply-demand balance."