Steel Products Prices North America

SIMA: Steel Import License Data for August

Written by Peter Wright


Total rolled product imports in August were down by 11.8 percent on a three-month moving average (3MMA) basis year over year. This follows the 15.3 percent decline in July on the same basis.

This early look at August’s import volume is based on Commerce Department license data (see explanation below.) This import analysis includes all major steel sectors: sheet, plate, longs and tubulars, with a total of 18 subsectors. We now publish an import market share analysis for the same 18 steel product groups. All volumes in this analysis are reported in short tons. We use three-month moving averages rather than single-month results to smooth out monthly variability.

Imports of total rolled products were down in May and June, increased in July and resumed the decline in August. On a 3MMA basis, imports of total rolled products declined each month in June through August. In the 12 months August 2018 through August 2019, total rolled product imports on a 3MMA basis have been consistently in the range of 1.70 to 1.94 million tons. In August, the 3MMA was 1.70 million tons, therefore at the bottom of the range. This consistency is not apparent in the year-over-year analysis because in the period December 2017 through June 2018, the range was much higher at 1.98 to 2.49 million tons. This will correct next month. Year over year on a 3MMA basis, sheet products were down by 15.6 percent, plate products were down by 16.5 percent, long products were down by 11.3 percent and tubulars were down by 8.0 percent. This is an example of how a report can spin very different conclusions based on the chosen time period of reference. Imports of flat rolled, tubulars and longs all had a recent peak in May last year. Since then, total flat rolled (sheet + plate) imports have consistently declined, which may be tariff-driven. This is not so obvious for longs and tubulars where the decline since May 2018 has been less consistent.

Figure 1 shows the tonnage of total rolled steel and semi-finished imports through August on a 3MMA basis. Total rolled product volume has been on an erratically downward trend since mid-2017. Imports of semi-finished have been very erratic on a monthly basis since last May with a low of 276,000 in this latest data for August following July, which was the third highest month in that time period. This is why we use a 3MMA calculation in our analyses, the result of which is the much smoother line for semis in Figure 1. On this basis, since January last year, the range has been 492,000 to 884,000 tons with August at the low end with 584,000 tons. Evidently the Section 232 legislation has had no effect on semi-finished product imports.

Figure 2 summarizes the import volume of flat rolled, tubular and long products since 2004 on a 3MMA basis. All three have been trending down since mid-2017.

There are three tables in this report. In each of them we show the 3MMA of the tonnage in August 2019 and August 2018 with the year-over-year change. We then calculate the percentage change in volume in the most recent three months with the previous three months. This month we are comparing June through August with March through May (3M/3M). The next column to the right shows the year-over-year change as a percentage. Declines are color coded green and increases are coded red. Finally, in the far-right column, we subtract the 12-month change from the three-month change. This is a way of describing the magnitude of the recent trend as a percentage. It is not unusual for the color code of the trend to be the opposite of the two time frame analyses.

Table 1 describes the imports of all major sectors of the sheet and plate markets. In the flat rolled sectors shown in Table 1, total sheet and total plate products were down by over 15 percent year over year. On an individual product basis, electrogalvanized, tin plate and cut-to-length plate were up year over year. All other sectors were down. Figures 3 and 4 show the history of sheet and plate product imports since January 2004.

Table 2 shows the same analysis for long products where the year-over year volume was down by 11.3 percent year over year in total. All products except light shapes and heavy structurals were down year over year. Figure 5 shows the history of long product imports.

Table 3 shows that for tubular products in total the volume was down by 8.0 percent year-over-year with mechanical tubing being the only product to experience an increase. Line pipe was down the most. Figure 6 shows the history of tubular imports since January 2004.

Explanation: SMU publishes several import reports ranging from this very early look using license data to the very detailed analysis of final volumes by product, by district of entry and by source nation, which is available in the premium member section of our website. The early look is based on three-month moving averages using the latest license data, either the preliminary or final data for the previous month and final data for earlier months. We recognize that the license data is subject to revisions but believe that by combining it with earlier months in this way gives a reasonably accurate assessment of volume trends by product as early as possible. The main issue with the license data is that the month the tonnage arrives is not always the same month in which the license was recorded. In 2014, we conducted a 12-month analysis to evaluate the accuracy of the license data compared to final receipts. This analysis showed that the licensed tonnage of all carbon and low alloy products was 2.3 percent less than actual receipts, close enough to confidently include license data in this current update. The discrepancy declined continuously during the 12-month evaluation as a longer period was considered.

Statement from the Department of Commerce: The Steel Import Monitoring and Analysis (SIMA) system of the Department of Commerce collects and publishes data of steel mill product imports. By design, this information gives stakeholders valuable information on steel trade with the United States. This is achieved through two tools: the steel licensing program and the steel import monitor. All steel mill imports into the United States require a license issued by the SIMA office. The SIMA Licensing System is an online system for importers to register, apply for and receive licenses in a timely manner. In addition to managing the licensing system, SIMA publishes near-real-time aggregate data on steel mill imports into the United States. These data incorporate information collected from steel license applications and publicly released Census data. The data are displayed in tables and graphs for users to analyze. Additionally, SIMA provides data on U.S. steel mill exports, as well as imports and exports of select downstream steel products.

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