Steel Products

Commerce Lowers Duties on Corrosion-Resistant Steel from Korea
Written by Laura Miller
August 1, 2023
While conducting administrative reviews of the antidumping and countervailing duty orders on corrosion-resistant (galvanized/Galvalume) steel from South Korea, the US Department of Commerce has preliminarily adjusted the duties downward.

Note that different dumping and subsidy rates could be assigned in the final results of these reviews, which are scheduled to be issued by the end of November.
Sunset reviews of these AD and CVD orders were completed last year. Commerce and the US International Trade Commission determined at that time that the duties should be maintained for at least another five years.
CVD Order
In a review of the CVD on Korean sheet, Commerce considered the 2021 calendar year.
The agency set preliminary subsidy rates of 6.71% for KG Dongbu Steel; 1.43% for Posco, Posco Coated and Color Steel and SeAH Coated Metal; and 0.59% for Hyundai Steel.
The new rates differ from the rates set in the prior year’s administrative review: 9.47% for KG Steel/KG Dongbu Steel and 9.47% for Posco, SeAH, SY Co., and Samsung Electronics Co.; and 0.27% de minimis for Hyundai Steel.
De minimis rates below 0.5% mean no duties will be collected on those imports.
AD Order
Commerce set preliminary weighted-average dumping margins of 0% de minimis for the Dongkuk, Hyundai, KG Dongbu, Posco, and SeAH groups of companies.
The new dumping rates are lower than the 1.79% rate set in the previous review for the above-listed companies, except for Hyundai, which also had a 0% rate assigned then.

Laura Miller
Read more from Laura MillerLatest in Steel Products

Data centers drive construction growth in April: Dodge
The index has fluctuated since reaching a record high in January to kickstart the year.

Asian HR still much cheaper than US and EU material
Domestic hot-rolled (HR) coil prices moved lower this week, now down six of the last seven weeks. Recent price erosion has been seen in offshore markets, keeping the price gap between imports and domestic products largely flat week on week (w/w).

Domestic steel shipments rise in March: AISI
US steel shipments increased both sequentially and on-year in March, according to the latest data from the American Iron and Steel Institute (AISI).

SMU Steel Summit 2025: It’s coming at you fast!
Before you know it, we’ll all be singing those famous words made popular by Alice Cooper back in ’79 – “school’s out for summer!” But it’s not “all the girls and boys making that noise,” it’s the growing buzz around SMU’s Steel Summit 2025! So, while August might seem like a long way off, we’ve […]

Rig counts trend lower in US and Canada
Oil and gas drilling activity eased in both the US and Canada this week, according to Baker Hughes. US rig counts remain near multi-year lows, and Canadian activity continues its seasonal slowdown.