Chinese steel profits recover as Beijing targets overcapacity
At the half-year mark, accumulated profits from ferrous metal smelting leaped nearly 14-fold, albeit from the tiny base of the same period last year, according to the statistics bureau on Sunday (Jul 27). Margins found support in June as mills cut output, and raw material costs were generally weaker than product prices.
The steel industry has endured a torrid few years due to the crash in China's property market, traditionally its chief source of demand. That's left the sector a prime target for Beijing's anti-involution campaign, which has shifted into higher gear in recent weeks.
Although mills have dodged meaningful limits on capacity before, there's heightened urgency among policymakers to restrain excessive competition across the economy.
Ways to rein in overcapacity are still being considered, although mills may have gotten ahead of the game by significantly reducing production in June. That pushed first-half output to its lowest since 2020, leaving it an open question whether the government will need to enforce further cuts.
At the same time, demand has improved. Consumption rose 4.3 per cent in the first half, led by autos and machinery, according to Bloomberg Intelligence (BI). While the construction sector remains fragile, exports have defied trade headwinds and continued to boom, BI said.
And the outlook is getting brighter, not least from the jump in demand likely to result from the construction of China's mega-dam in Tibet. Over 60 per cent of steelmakers are now profitable, UBS said in a note last week, compared with just 30 per cent in July 2024.
Still, increases in raw material costs, and a barnstorming rally in coking coal in particular, could yet present a threat to profitability. BLOOMBERG

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