Scrap Prices North America
August Ferrous Scrap Prices Expected to Tread Sidways to Up $10
Written by John Packard
July 31, 2014
The domestic steel mills are not canceling any remaining open July scrap orders which is an indication that the mills are busy, need the scrap and do not anticipate being able to buy scrap for less money in August than they did in July. SMU scrap sources are telling us demand is good and supply continues to be decent. The combination of both points toward a “strong sideways to up” ferrous scrap market as we head into August scrap pricing negotiations between the domestic mills and the scrap dealers.
A large national scrap company told us, “Generally speaking, the market appears to be quite firm heading into August as mill operating rates and finished steel selling prices continue to improve.” This same source felt scrap prices would be up $10-$15 per gross ton in August. This company also felt negotiations would drag out as there is a “disparity between buyer and seller expectations.”
One of our scrap sources from the East Coast told us, “The August market is looking firmly sideways. Mills – many of whom are owed a good amount of scrap because of rail service disruptions all over the country – are not canceling orders. They do not think they will be able to buy the scrap back at less money. and their business is good. One major flat rolled mill told me yesterday they were booked through September and were beginning to book for October.
“The spring flows, which started later than had been expected this year – extended later than they usually do as well (into the early part of July). But those stronger flows have now abated a good bit and we are definitely in the summer doldrums.
“Export demand is ok. Prices are stable or rising a little. They are firm enough to keep scrap that is traditionally exported destined to overseas mills and out of the domestic market. But export volumes remain well below their historic levels.”
The expectation from the east coast is trading will commence early next week and we should have a good feel for pricing one week from today. Stay tuned.
John Packard
Read more from John PackardLatest in Scrap Prices North America
HRC vs. prime scrap spread flat in November
The price spread between hot-rolled coil (HRC) and prime scrap remained the same in November as both tags were at the levels seen a month earlier, according to SMU’s most recent pricing data.
HRC vs. busheling spread narrows slightly in October
The price spread between hot-rolled coil (HRC) and prime scrap narrowed marginally in October, according to SMU’s most recent pricing data.
HRC vs. scrap spread widens but remains low
The price spread between hot-rolled (HR) coil and prime scrap widened slightly in August but remains in territory not seen since late 2022, according to SMU’s most recent pricing data.
The most underappreciated scrap grade
Over the last several years, I have noticed widening spreads between #1 Heavy Melting Steel (ISRI 201) and Shredded (ISRI 210,211), as well as Plate & Structural (ISRI 232).
Domestic scrap tags flat in April
April scrap prices came in sideways in the US, sources told SMU.