SMU's December at a glance
SMU’s Monthly Review provides a summary of important steel market metrics for the previous month. Our latest report includes data updated through December 31st.
SMU’s Monthly Review provides a summary of important steel market metrics for the previous month. Our latest report includes data updated through December 31st.
Construction spending inched higher in November for a second straight month.
The 36th annual Tampa Steel Conference is just four weeks away. We now have over 300 people registered to join us at the JW Marriott Tampa Water Street from Sunday, Feb. 2, through Tuesday, Feb. 4. Join us along with hundreds of industry participants in warm and sunny Florida!
Japan’s Nippon Steel says it has achieved the world’s highest reduction in CO2 emissions to date by using heated hydrogen instead of coal to reduce iron ore in a blast furnace.
SMU offices will be closed from Monday, Dec. 23, 2024 through Wednesday, Jan. 1, 2025.
And just like that, we’re wrapping up the last SMU newsletter of 2024. We’re closing out our 19th year and looking with wide-eyed anticipation to what 2025 will bring.
The November ABI decreased month over month but was still the third-highest reading of the past two years.
It’s not too late to ask Santa for what you really want this year. We’re less than two months away from the 36th annual Tampa Steel Conference! More than 300 people from over 150 companies have already registered to attend at the JW Marriott Tampa Water Street from Sunday, Feb. 2, to Tuesday, Feb. 4. […]
Recovery continues but geopolitical risks remain for 2025
This CRU Insight discusses a few key topics our clients have been asking about as 2024 comes to a close and 2025 begins. This piece introduces these topics briefly now before we discuss them in more detail in a webinar in January 2025. In previous years, we have published a year-end Insight on our ‘Top […]
Both of our Sentiment Indices remain in positive territory and indicate that steel buyers are optimistic about the success of their businesses.
SMU looks back at stories from Decembers past, one, five, 10, and 100 years ago.
Steel mill production times have seen very little change since September, according to buyers participating in our latest market survey.
Steel buyers of sheet and plate products say mills are still willing to bend on spot pricing this week, though not quite as much as they were two weeks prior, according to our most recent survey data.
Lawrence D. ‘Larry’ Romboski, Jr.'s career in steel spanned 35 years, most recently serving as VP of sales for NLMK USA.
The size of the capital structure and the composition of the owners are telling statements about the importance that Beijing has assigned to this venture.
“New commodity-specific tariffs, mainly on steel and aluminum products, could widen price differentials and divert trade flows,” the credit agency forewarned.
It's that time of year again. You know, that time when people wonder if those things are drones in New Jersey or if the aliens are ready to come onto the stage just in time for Inauguration Day. What will that do for steel price volatility? In any case, the SMU team finds itself in Pittsburgh this week.
We have seen very little change in sheet and plate prices across the past month.
The prices being paid by US-based buyers has continued to decline as ferrous raw material demand across the globe remains weak.
Shipments of heating and cooling equipment were stable from September to October, AHRI said.
The steelmaker has kept its weekly consumer spot price for hot-rolled steel sheet unchanged since Nov. 12.
Domestic production remains significantly low compared to levels recorded earlier in the year.
The Community Chat last Wednesday with ITR economist Taylor St. Germain is worth listening to if you couldn’t tune in live. You can find the replay and Taylor’s slide deck here. You can also find SMU reporter Stephanie Ritenbaugh’s writeup of the webinar here. Taylor is Alan Beaulieu’s protégé at ITR. Many of you know Alan from his talks at SMU Steel Summit. I found Taylor’s analysis just as insightful as Alan’s.
Trends in energy prices and active rig counts are leading demand indicators for oil country tubular goods (OCTG), line pipe and other steel products
A roundup of CRU's weekly aluminum news.
Cleveland-Cliffs plans to increase prices for hot-rolled (HR) coil to $800 per short ton (st). Cliffs said the increase announcement coincides with the opening of its February order book for both contract and spot tons of HR.
We are less than two months away from the 36th annual Tampa Steel Conference! We hope you will join us there!
Scrap prices were stable-to-down in most regions as demand weakness offset seasonal supply tightness
The price spread between hot-rolled coil (HRC) and prime scrap narrowed slightly in December, according to SMU’s most recent pricing data.