The world’s largest steel industry is going through a ‘winter’ amid a supply glut and weak demand

China’s steel industry has been struggling as the country’s property sector remains in the doldrums and is unable to absorb excess capacity.

“Chinese demand has been a major disappointment for metals across the board,” said Sarbin Chowdhury, head of commodities analysis at BMI, particularly steel and iron ore.

“This is mainly due to the weak property sector in China. The property sector downturn is set to last several years, and that definitely does bode negatively for industrial metals that are required in infrastructure,” she added.

China is the world’s largest producer of steel, accounting for more than half the world’s output at over a billion tonnes a year.

It is also the world’s leading consumer of steel and iron ore, and prices for both materials have dropped as steel supply remains bloated amid weak domestic demand.

China steel rebar prices are down over 20 per cent year to date at 3,208 Chinese yuan ($666.50) per tonne, data from financial information provider Wind showed. Prices of China iron ore, the key material for steel, have plunged over 28 per cent so far this year, according to FactSet data.

Steel industry’s ‘winter’

Hu Wangming, chairman of the world’s largest steel producer, state-owned Baowu Steel, recently said the steel industry was going through a “winter,” adding that the industry was in the midst of a long-term adjustment period.

The Chinese steel industry is caught “between a rock and a hard place” as steel makers’ margins are getting increasingly squeezed by weak demand, said Bank of America’s Head of Asia Pacific Basic Materials, Oil and Gas Research, Matty Zhao. The muted demand is expected to continue into 2025 on the back of a “very weak” Chinese property market, she told CNBC.

“Chinese exports have had a material impact on steel production prospects in rest of the world.”

Additionally, with no specific measures announced at the country’s high-profile Third Plenum gathering, hopes are fading that China’s embattled property sector will come out of its slump.

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