Looking Ahead, Part 1: A Surprising Outlook For Steel Prices In 2020

 | Mar 20, 2019 07:19AM ET

According to Bank of America (NYSE:BAC) Research Analyst Timna Tanners, Steelmageddon™ looms on the horizon due to massive planned capacity increases in the U.S. steel industry.

Her analysis indicates the equivalent of around a 20% capacity increase when aggregating investments across companies and production methodologies over the next few years. Due to the massive ramp-up, the Steelmageddon™ theory predicts 2022 or so as the time when we may see greatly suppressed prices, and therefore rampant mill closures, due to a steel supply glut in the U.S.

Meanwhile, in recent years, the Chinese government policy for the steel industry focused on capacity reduction and shutting down outdated plants. These closures resulted in an estimated reduction of 300 million metric tons of China’s steelmaking capacity.

In addition to these outdated blast furnace steelmaking facilities closing during the past few years, others still in operation face ongoing production restrictions during pollution alert periods. While some outdated capacity closed, other facilities with the latest technology brought new capacity onstream.

This “upgrade strategy,” if we could call it that, could have profound ramifications.

Others have noted that China may become even more of a competitor as that industry expands into higher-tech areas — the domain of the U.S., Japan and Europe — such as in harder alloys like those used by aerospace and defense, as pointed out by MetalMiner’s Stuart Burns in 2017 .

So will the case of Steelmageddon (™) transpire such that China continues to overproduce despite moving into higher value-added steelmaking production while the U.S. fails to curb inefficient production? We will come to that point in a moment.

h3 Global Crude Steel Production Increases/h3

First, let’s take a look at some background information.

According to the World Steel Association, global crude steel output in 2018 reached 1,808.6 million tons — a 4.6% increase when compared to 2017.

In terms of recent monthly numbers, global crude steel production came in at 146.7 million tons in January, a 1% year-on-year increase over January 2018, according to the World Steel Association.

After a couple of weaker years in terms of production growth, total global production began to increase again in 2017.

h3 Chinese Steel Production Continues to Increase/h3

In fact, China’s steel output has continued to rise unabated, albeit in an annual cyclical pattern: