Latin American steel consumption in January regains pre-pandemic level

Friday, 16 April 2021 16:51:15 (GMT+3)   |   Istanbul
       

According to Alacero, the Latin American steel association, Latin American steel consumption continues to grow due to the recovery in demand and the rebuilding of stocks, both by consumers and in the distribution chain. In January this year, steel consumption in Latin America increased for the ninth consecutive month by 0.8 percent compared to the previous month and was up by 12.7 percent year on year, totaling 6.09 million mt. The steel consumption level returned to pre-pandemic levels in January.

Brazil was the largest contributor to the improved steel demand performance, with an 8.8 percent increase, recording a fifth consecutive month above two million mt. Argentina also showed a rise in January consumption compared to December 2020, up 10.8 percent.

In January this year, Latin American countries’ steel imports increased by 5.7 percent year on year, while their steel exports fell by 27.3 percent compared to the same month last year as the industry focused on supplying the local markets. In the given month, Latin America’s steel imports accounted for 35 percent of regional consumption, up from 33 percent recorded in 2020. The steel exports in the given month were 12.4 percent lower than December 2020 and accounted for only 11.4 percent of regional production in January, below the 15.6 percent share in 2020. As a consequence, there was a worsening of the trade balance deficit, which had already been registered in November and December.

In the January-February period this year, Latin American crude steel output totaled 10.21 million mt, increasing by 3.9 percent year on year, while rolled steel production in February rose by 3.4 percent year on year and two percent compared to the previous month, reaching 4.18 million mt.

The short-term outlook is favorable for strengthening steel demand in the region. According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), in 2021 the global economy is forecast to grow by six percent, developed countries by 5.1 percent, emerging economies by 6.7 percent, and Latin America by 4.6 percent; in the region, Brazil stands out with a rate of 3.7 percent, and Mexico with five percent.

“We are facing a period of uncertainty and are in the process of getting the balance between demand and production right. However, at this time, we must take care of market conditions in the face of the growing threat of imports and the increasing trade deficit. The macroeconomic recovery should accelerate in the second half of the year, and we expect production to maintain its upward curve and consumption to sustain its growth at the regional level, with the trade deficit under control,” Francisco Leal, chief executive of Alacero, said.


Similar articles

Vale, BHP and Samarco offer $25.4 billion in repairs for dam collapse 

30 Apr | Steel News

US raw steel production down 0.9 percent week-on-week

30 Apr | Steel News

Chile’s apparent steel consumption increases in 2023

29 Apr | Steel News

Somanath Tripathy at IREPAS: India’s total scrap consumption to increase to 35.6 million mt in 2024

29 Apr | Steel News

Roman Perepelytsia at IREPAS: Steel consumption in Ukraine approaches pre-war levels

29 Apr | Steel News

Net profit increases in Q1 2024 at Aceros Arequipa

26 Apr | Steel News

Ternium’s net income up 2.3 percent in Q1

25 Apr | Steel News

German crude steel output increases by 6.0 percent in January-March

25 Apr | Steel News

CISA mills’ daily steel output up 0.33% in mid-April, inventory down 0.75%

24 Apr | Steel News

World crude steel output down 4.3 percent in March

23 Apr | Steel News