At the last session of the SteelOrbis 2019 Fall Conference & 81st IREPAS Meeting held in Düsseldorf on September 22-24, Wilhelm Alff from Duferco, the chairman of the traders committee, said that the main question is whether the trade conflict between the US and China is coming to an end. He expressed the view that it will probably go on as long as the administrations do not change. “In any case, the result will not change much as China is not in the US market,” Mr. Alff said. Commenting on the possible reduction in the US of antidumping duties on Turkish rebar, the committee chairman said that this will not help because Turkey cannot compete with domestic producers nor with Mexico which has zero duty. Against this backdrop of trade barriers, he said the role of a trader is becoming more vital as the trader acts as a risk-taker.
He pointed out that electric arc furnaces have a $40-50/mt price advantage compared to blast furnaces and said that the traders committee expects that this gap will become more balanced in the near future as they believe the downtrend in scrap prices seems to reaching the end.
Mr. Alff said that, with Turkey reducing capacity utilization to approximately 50 percent, a substantial reduction has been seen in the material which is available in the market. He added that, as the US and EU markets are closed, Turkish mills are looking to the Far East, Yemen, Israel and Africa. Turkish exporters have already taken away some market shares from the Chinese mills who had been dominant in the Far Eastern markets. The Duferco official pointed out that, although Chinese mills have increased their production, most of this has been consumed domestically and put into stocks.
The committee chairman said that China will not be entirely absent from the market in terms of long products, but definitely they can hardly compete with Turkey and Middle Eastern countries. Turkey seems to be in a better position today in the ASEAN region; however, it is out of necessity rather than out of desire, he noted.
Commenting on the recent changes in the EU safeguard duty, Alff agreed that the changes are specifically targeting Turkey. He went on to point out that, while determining the quota, the EU left out the year when Turkey had exported the most products to the EU and that, as a result, Turkey got a relatively small quota. He also remarked that there are other countries concerning which you would wonder why they received a large quota that they will probably never use.