Final Thoughts

Final Thoughts

Written by John Packard


Earlier this week Steel Market Update went out to a group of steel buyers to gather pricing information and market intelligence regarding how they were reacting to the recent price announcements, and if they thought this round of increases would result in yet another dead cat bounce. (A dead cat bounce is one where prices rise briefly before continuing their downward trajectory. The saying goes that even a dead cat will bounce when dropped from a high enough platform. Personally, I have never tested the theory…).

John Packard Summit 18We received a mixture of comments with most leaning toward another dead cat bounce. I tend to be a little more optimistic than most steel buyers (luxury of not having to make purchasing decisions). My short-term optimism comes from 1) removal of a couple of blast furnaces from the market, 2) normal bounce we get from demand in early first quarter due to inventory adjustments for tax purposes or other reasons, 3) a pricing “overcorrection,” which took numbers below sustainable levels, 4) reductions in inventories (however, our data is suggesting this may be short lived), 5) and my gut instinct (which has failed me on many occasions and you should never make decisions based on my old gut…).

Here are some comments of note that were provided earlier this week:

“Dead cat bounce? If the mills attempt a third increase (which I fully expect), it will dismiss the chance of prices sticking at higher levels for more than 60 days. If the mills announce a third increase in the next 2-3 weeks, they may accomplish filling order books for January, but dramatically increase the odds for the dead cat bounce to occur, as very few will need or want steel in February and beyond at elevated pricing. One mill told us they will run up pricing as high and as quickly as they can, but admit they see no longevity to the higher pricing. Unfortunately, this behavior promotes mini-cycles, which we are doomed to repeat over and over. Knowing these cycles have become the norm over the last year, it mystifies me as to why USS would WANT to go away from contracts in 2020 and live largely in a domain of mini-cycles. We believe the Arcelor BOF idle at Indiana Harbor will help pricing longer term, but doubt we will see the impact before Q2. We also fully anticipate USS putting Great Lakes on idle in the coming months. If scrap continues to claw its way upward, capacity is taken out of the market, imports are kept and bay, and demand remains flat, we see support for higher pricing. We have become more of a psychology-driven market than a data/metric-driven market this year and that just makes long-term decision making much more difficult. In our opinion, we don’t see index pricing exceeding $550 in Q1 2020. Conversely, we don’t see it falling below $475 in that timeframe. If you throw in all the variables of an election year, an artificially stimulated economy, global trade and geopolitical happenings, the dawn of more EAF capacity in North America, an unprecedented economic growth cycle, possible presidential impeachment, record U.S. debt…well it makes figuring out our industry as easy as wading waist deep in alligators.” (Large service center)

“Mills are firm in their pricing. Not just another dead cat bounce.” (Service center)

“I’m thinking that prices head higher for a few weeks, like July, but likely fail to find supporting demand. That then creates a change in price direction. I think 2020 might be like that; wash, rinse, repeat.” (Large service center)

“Prices are pretty firm. I think these two will stick; probably be another increase soon. Removal of the blast furnaces should keep prices up, if the mills have some discipline…but we know that never happens.” (End user)

We released our final report on service center inventories, shipments, percentage of inventories committed to contracts, days of supply on order and total days of supply on hand to our data providers this afternoon. Included in that report was an analysis of the data and forecast for flat rolled and plate steels. This report is only available to service centers who supply SMU data (on a confidential basis). The report is free to data providers.

If you would like to become a confidential data provider, and your company is a service center or wholesaler buying, selling and inventorying prime flat rolled or plate steels, please reach out to Estelle.Tran@crugroup.com or John@SteelMarketUpdate.com and we will provide more details.

Tomorrow we will release a scaled down version of the data to our Premium newsletter subscribers. If you would like to upgrade an Executive level subscription to Premium, please contact Paige Mayhair at 724-720-1012.

Paige can also assist those companies looking to renew, expand those who receive our newsletter(s) as well as those receiving the newsletters who might have questions. She can be reached at Paige@SteelMarketUpdate.com or by the phone number listed in the paragraph above.

We are still taking registrations for the Jan. 7-8, 2020 Steel 101 workshop in California – go to www.SteelMarketUpdate.com/Events/Steel101 for more details.

As always, your business is truly appreciated by all of us here at Steel Market Update.

John Packard, President & CEO

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Final thoughts

Last week was a newsy one for the US sheet market. Nucor’s announcement that it would publish a weekly HR spot price was the talk of the town – whether that was in chatter among colleagues, at the Boy Scouts of America Metals Industry dinner, or in SMU’s latest market survey. Some think that it could Nucor's spot HR price could bring stability to notoriously volatile US sheet prices, according to SMU's latest steel market survey. Others think it’s too early to gauge its impact. And still others said they were leery of any attempt by producers to control prices.