You are here: Home > Steel News > Latest Steel News > Fitch...

Fitch raises short-term global steel price forecast, no significant fall expected

Tuesday, 25 May 2021 12:13:00 (GMT+3)   |   Istanbul

US-based rating agency Fitch Solutions has announced that it has revised its short-term global steel price forecast to $800/mt for the first half of this year, compared to $660/mt in its previous forecast, due to the imbalance between supply and demand.

According to Fitch, steel prices have increased significantly since the fourth quarter last year and are at an average of $883/mt now. The agency expects this uptrend to start stabilizing as the second half of the year approaches, but does not anticipate a significant reduction in price levels, due to higher demand despite steady production levels.

Fitch also expects European steel demand to recover. “We also expect more localization of supply chains in the coming years, leading to Western downstream industries consuming greater amounts of European steel compared to Chinese exports,” Fitch stated, adding that it expects more downstream industries to prefer European steel to reduce their carbon emissions.

As for the longer term, Fitch stated that demand will stabilize after a recovery in 2021 at a time production remains elevated, which will push global steel prices significantly lower in 2022. Fitch sees prices averaging $600/mt next year and $535/mt over 2023-2025. “Ultimately, we expect that a combination of slowing Chinese steel consumption growth and rising global steel market protectionism prompting greater production in affected countries to loosen the market and drag prices lower in the medium term,” Fitch said. Fitch also noted that China’s local steel demand will slow down in 2022 with the balancing of the economy, and so local steel prices in China will fall, lowering average global steel prices.

Fitch Solutions had previously stated that the recent rise in global steel prices would be short-lived, and that prices would decline towards the end of the first quarter this year as steel production continued to be restarted, as SteelOrbis reported.


Tags: North America 

Similar articles

US flat steel prices mostly steady though higher January scrap could cause prices to creep up

17 Jan | Flats and Slab

February US scrap seen steady to higher following a January scrap boost

17 Jan | Scrap & Raw Materials

US OCTG imports up 30.7 percent in November from October

17 Jan | Steel News

US beam exports up 18.3 percent in November from October

17 Jan | Steel News

Aperam’s acquisition of Universal Stainless approved by stockholders

17 Jan | Steel News

Pacific Steel gets additional funding for its mini mill in California

17 Jan | Steel News

SSAB withdraws from talks with US government for decarbonization project

17 Jan | Steel News

US assigns zero dumping margin for CR steel from S. Korea

17 Jan | Steel News

US import rebar and wire rod markets steady to up as domestic mills announce price increases

17 Jan | Longs and Billet

US domestic rebar and wire rod prices on the rise as mills react to higher January scrap values

16 Jan | Longs and Billet