Economy

Global Steel Production Fell in June: Worldsteel

Written by David Schollaert


World crude steel production tumbled in June, down 5.9% versus the same period last year. Last month’s output was also down 6.7% when compared to May, declining for just the second time this year, according to World Steel Association (worldsteel) data.

Global output was estimated at 158.1 million metric tons in June. Steelmakers around the world decreased production by an estimated 11.4 million metric tons month-on-month (MoM).

Last month’s decline in crude steel production was driven by a broad cutback in output across the top 10 steel-producing nations, while Germany was unchanged. China’s production fell 6.1% MoM, while crude steel production in the rest of the world fell MoM in June by 7.5%. The rest of the world produced a total of 67.4 million metric tons, down from 72.9 million metric tons the month prior.

June’s global total was down 9.3%, or 16.3 million metric tons, from May 2021’s all-time high of 174.4 million metric tons. Last month’s decline pushed total output down 0.9%, or 1.4 million metric tons, versus the pre-pandemic period of June 2019.

The US remained the fourth-largest crude steel producer in the world in June, accounting for 6.9 million metric tons, or 6.1%, of the global total. US production last month fell by 4.2%, or 300,000 metric tons, versus May’s total.

June’s US production was 200,000 metric tons below, or 2.3% less than, June 2021 output. June 2022 was also down 4.7% versus the pre-pandemic period in June 2019.

Shown below in Figure 1 is the annualized monthly global steel production on a three-month moving average (3MMA) basis and capacity utilization since January 2000. Also shown is the YoY growth rate of global production on the same 3MMA basis since January 2013. Both are based on worldsteel data.

GSP Figure1

Mill capacity utilization in June on a 3MMA basis was 78.7%, down 0.5 percentage points from the month prior. On a tons-per-day basis, production in June was 5.270 million metric tons, down 3.6% MoM. That figure is 543,000 tons off May 2021’s record rate of 5.813 million metric tons. Growth on a 3MMA basis through June YoY was -4.2%, a 0.3 percentage point decline from the month prior. That’s a far cry from the 18.4% expansion seen in May of last year.

Displayed in the table below is global production broken down into regions. It shows the production of the top 10 nations in June and their share of the global total. It also shows the latest three months and 12 months of production through June with YoY growth rates for each period. Regions are shown in black font and individual nations in gray.

World steel production overall is down in both the three- and 12-month comparisons, a significant deceleration from the 17.9% growth just about one year prior. Despite recent gains, the market has not maintained positive momentum: the three-month growth rate in most cases has been lower than the 12-month growth rate for 10 consecutive months now.

GSP Table1

The table shows that North American production was down 3% in the three months through June but up 8.3% YoY. The positive momentum in the North American market over the past 12 months indicates that the economy has been strong despite the pandemic and inflation. Yet, when compared to the same pre-pandemic period in 2019, the present output is down 6.5%.

China’s Crude Steel Production

China’s monthly steel production was estimated at 90.7 million metric tons in June, down from 96.6 million metric tons the month prior. The 5.9-million-ton monthly decrease was the first MoM decline in production since February. June’s total is about 9 million metric tons below China’s all-time high crude steel output of 99.5 million metric tons last May.

On a 3MMA basis, the annual rate of China’s crude steel production maxed out at 1.166 billion metric tons in May 2021. It has fallen repeatedly since February of last year, reaching its lowest total in November 2021. China’s annual capacity stands at 1.120 billion metric tons. Its annual capacity utilization slipped to 88.3% last month, its lowest mark in 22 months and down from an all-time high of 98.4% last June.

China still produced more than half of the world’s steel in June, 57.4%. Chinese production in June this year was 3.5% above pre-pandemic levels in June 2019.

China’s crude steel production rate and its percentage of global output are displayed side-by-side in Figure 2.

GSP Figure2

The fluctuations in China’s steel production since January 2013 versus the growth of global steel excluding China, both on a 3MMA basis, are shown side-by-side in Figure 3. From October 2020 through December 2021, the rest of the world’s production rose sharply, reaching a peak of 38.0% in April. Since then, the rate for the rest of the world’s annual production has decreased sequentially to -3.2% in March. In April and May, the percentage improved slightly but shrank back to -8.9% last month. China’s annual growth rate was -3.8% in June, an improvement from -4.7% in May. Annual growth is nowhere near the +15.1% seen last April.

GSP Figure3

By David Schollaert, David@SteelMarketUpdate.com

David Schollaert

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