Market
January 9, 2024
Final thoughts
Written by Michael Cowden
I expected that we’d start off January with prime scrap prices modestly up if for no other reason than industrial activity typically slows down over the holidays. And mills’ appetite for scrap typically increases in anticipation of stronger Q1 order activity.
It’s a normal seasonal pattern. So I wasn’t surprised to see Cleveland-Cliffs come out with a price increase last Wednesday. And up $50 per short ton (st) seemed reasonable, even modest by the standards or prices increase over the last year.
January scrap, it’s messy
But then things got weird. One mill, typically the leader in US scrap price trends, offered down $50 per gross ton on prime last Friday. Another mill didn’t follow and instead bought sideways – or that’s my best understanding of where things stood when this article was filed.
It all seemed a little, well, unsettled. My colleagues and I checked with some of our scrap sources on whether the January scrap settlement was more chaotic than usual. They confirmed that it was.
“It’s hard to take the market that far down in January, especially with firming prices for export and pig iron,” one scrap market expert said.
Said another: “This is one of the strangest markets I have ever traded, especially for a January.”
“Where we are right now is … the US domestic market won’t commit to prices, with sellers expecting sideways prices and consumers bidding anywhere from sideways to down $10-$20 for shred and sideways to down $30 for prime grades,” he added.
Will the scrap market finally settle on Wednesday? Let’s hope so! I say that because we’re also seeing uncertainty over the direction of sheet prices. And unsettled scrap prices aren’t helping matters much.
HR going to $1,150 or below $1,000?
Take hot-rolled (HR) coil, for example. Certain mills might be offering $1,150/st. But we haven’t seen many takers at that price. And for larger consumers, prices in the $900s/st remain in the market, buyer sources tell us.
Meanwhile, HR futures for February fell just below $1,000/st on Tuesday. March briefly declined to below $900/st. Futures of course don’t predict the future. But they do reflect the opinion of respondents to our latest survey.
We asked folks when sheet prices might peak or whether they were near a peak already. I don’t want to steal too much thunder from ‘Market Chatter’ in our Thursday issue. But here are some responses:
- “If Nucor does not announce, yes.”
- “It certainly already felt like we were ‘peaking.’ And now with scrap looking soft to start ’24, I would say we are getting there for sure.”
- “I feel they are near a peak or possibly already peaked. Visiting with mills on galvanized coils, they have capacity to fill in February and even stock on hand.”
I’m not going to pin all that bearish/cautious sentiment on scrap. I think it also reflects the reality that HR imports could be available in the Q2 in the $800s per ton, or ~$200/ton below where current domestic prices are. CR imports, meanwhile, have been offered in the $1,000s per ton – roughly where domestic HR prices are now and ~$200/ton below current US spot prices for CR. We’re also told that imported plate could be landing in the spring at around $1,100/ton – or about $300/ton below current US prices.
“Now it’s, ‘Who blinks?’ And I think the mills will blink first,” an executive at a large distributor told me today. “My belief is we’ve hit the high and it’s starting its descent. How low it goes? I have no idea.”
Not everyone was on board with that prediction.
“This is a key week. At the end of the week or toward the end of it, we’ll know whether mill order books are getting a shot in the arm with new orders,” a service center executive said. He also suggested keeping a close eye out for unplanned outages with severe weather now gripping much of the US.
“I’m hoping that this is a big week for the mills so things can keep climbing,” he said. But he also noted that he wouldn’t be making any big, speculative spot buys in the meantime.
SMU Community Chat
Don’t miss the Community Chat on Wednesday at 11 am ET with Reibus. We’ll host new CEO Temy Mancusi-Ungaro as well as President Chris Shipp, who recently returned to the Atlanta-based digital marketplace for steel and metals.
We’ll talk about what new leadership means for the direction of Reibus, what the company sees in today’s market, and we’ll take your questions too. You can register here.
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