GMS Week 33 – COOLING OFF?

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We have seen the first signs of cooling in the Indian sub-continent markets this week, as steel plate prices declined by well-nigh USD 30/LDT in Bangladesh. Plane the Turkish market showed signs of softening this week, as both import and Turkish local steel prices reported declines of their own, and early indications out of Turkey once seem slightly softer than the preceding weeks.

This has come as something of a surprise to many in the industry, expressly since it was only recently spoken that China would not be exporting steel until remoter notice – thereby ensuring domestic supplies do not lose their values with unseemly billets undercutting their own inventories.

Towards stability

The significance of this utterance from China is likely to prevent any significant declines in steel prices and may plane lead to a stable-to-positive market movements, moving forward into Q4 – expressly as the monsoons subside in the sub-continent.

The most recent ship recycling recession greeted us in 2015, when steel prices increasingly than halved as a result of the Chinese market dumping unseemly steel billets wideness global steel markets – leading to the introduction of anti-dumping laws wideness the Indian sub-continent and elsewhere.

Fluctuations

However, fluctuations in steel and vessel prices are a perennial reality in these respective markets, plane though fundamentals do remain firm and there seems a small endangerment of an welding in the recycling markets (at least in the short term), expressly as forward prices on steel remain bullish to stable.

Several vessels – particularly in the beleaguered tanker sector – protract to work firm on a weekly basis, as shipowners squint to mazuma in on some of these fantastic offerings whilom USD 600/LT LDT on select units.

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 Source: GMSINC