Vietnamese construction steel sales up 21% m-o-m in July
Vietnamese construction steel sales up 21% m-o-m in July
Sales volume of construction long products in Vietnam in July reached 359,000 tonnes, an increase of 20.5% from the previous month but down 32.4% year-on-year, according to the Vietnam Steel Association (VSA). Production of longs in June at 308,000 t was down by 11.2% m-o-m and lower by 29.1% y-o-y.
Cumulative sales of longs during the first seven months of this year reached 2.78m t, up 3.2% compared with January-July 2010. Production rose to 2.89m t, an increase of 7.7% over the corresponding period last year.
“Steel sales slowed down in June,” VSA vice-chairman and general-secretary Dinh Huy Tam tells Steel Business Briefing with reference to sales dipping to just under 300,000 t for that month. He tells SBB that steel demand in August will be adversely affected by a slowdown in construction activity. This is due to the rainy season as well as theHungry Ghost Festival taking place this month.
The tight monetary and fiscal policies being implemented in Vietnam to stem high inflation continues to have a negative impact on steel consumption, says Tam. Inflation during the first seven months of this year reached 14.6% and bank borrowing interest rates are prevailing at more than 20% per annum.
The VSA tracks data from its member steel mills that together contribute around 85% of Vietnam's long steel production.
Korean domestic H-beam prices firm slightly.
Korean spot market prices for H-beams produced by domestic mills have climbed to KRW 970,000r - 990,000/t ($892-910/t) for SS400 grade ‘junior’ beams this week, up by KRW 20,000-30,000/t ($18-27/t) from late July.
The climb reflects efforts by local dealers to pass on their higher input costs to end-users in tandem with rising prices from the two producers Hyundai Steel and Dongkuk Steel Mill.
In late July, Hyundai announced higher sales prices for H-beams and sections starting from 1 August of KRW 30,000-40,000/t depending on product and size, as SBB reported. With an upturn in market sentiment, spot prices for China-origin H-beams of similar size have also seen a small rise over the past two weeks of KRW 10,000-20,000/t to reach KRW 880,000-900,000/t ($809-827/t).
Buying activity among end-users remains thin for the moment, but industry sources believe H-beat prices will remain firm for the rest of this half. They cite several factors including higher input costs for mill from new electricity charges, output constraints during July-August due to summer maintenance, and expected better construction sector demand from autumn, as SBB has reported.
Meanwhile, Korea’s total H-beam output in this year’s first half stood at 1.53mt, up 4% from 1.47mt in H1 2010, according to Korea Iron & Steel Association data. Within the total, exports reached 668,200 t, up 6.1% y-o-y. But the total output for sections including angles and channels in H1 declined by 5.1% y-o-y to 2.08mt.
Source: SBB
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Cu Van Thep Larsen
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