| Baosteel, China's largest iron and
steel maker, has raised steel prices for the second
quarter of 2008 after it agreed with Brazilian iron
ore supplier Vale on a 65percent price hike this year.
Prices of major cold- and hot-rolled products will
increase by 800 yuan (111 U.S. dollars) per ton in
the April-June period, compared with the January-March
period, Tuesday''''s China Securities Journal quoted
an announcement by Baosteel as saying.
Ultra-low carbon steel and high carbon steel will
see a price rise of 800 yuan a ton and the price of
steel cable will climb 600 yuan.
Considering that Baosteel has a heavier reliance
on imported iron ore than other domestic competitors,
a 65-percent iron ore price rise could translate into
a cost mark-up of 258 yuan for Baosteel, as against
116 yuan for other domestic steel makers, according
to Chemease, a business information provider on Chinese
chemical commodity markets.
A steel price hike by up to 800 yuan will not only
offset its cost mark-up but also allow substantial
room to make profit, said Chemease analysts.
The hefty price hike shows Baosteel''''s confidence
in this year''''s steel market, said Du Hui, steel
industry analyst with Chemease, who added that further
price rises by the steel giant are very likely in
the third and fourth quarters.
An official with Baosteel said the company has also
stepped up its focus on high-end products for a better
bottom line.
The sector may see profits peak in the second quarter,
said Zhou Xizeng, a steel industry analyst with Citic
Securities.
Downstream industries such as shipping and construction
will fully absorb the cost increase, but hardware
and mechanical industries might be dealt with a heavy
blow, said Du.
China''''s daily steel output has shown signs of
shrinking since the end of last year, due to limited
iron ore supplies and soaring costs. Runaway iron
ore prices have also pushed steel prices up significantly.
Prices of major types of steel nationwide increased
by more than 400 yuan from Feb. 18 and Feb. 24, according
to Mysteel, an industry information website.
China, the world''''s largest steel producer and
consumer, imported 383 million tons of iron ore in
2007, up 17.4 percent year-on-year, according to the
China Iron and Steel Association.
Baosteel slipped 0.62 percent to 17.56 yuan on the
Shanghai Stock Exchange on Monday.
Author :An Lu
Sources :
Publishing Date :2008-2-29
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