Posted on 11 Apr 2008
The increase, just two months after Posco last put up prices,
comes after the company agreed to pay Brazilian miner Cia Vale do Rio Doce 65%
more for its iron ore and agreed to treble what it pays an Australian supplier
for coking coal.
Rising raw material costs are pushing up inflationary
pressure across
Posco, which sells three-quarters of its products at home
and depends heavily on imported raw materials, said it would raise domestic
prices ofsof hot-rolled steel to 700,000 won (28,730) a tonne from 17 April, up
20.7%. Cold-rolled steel and shipbuilding plate will cost 785,000 won a tonne, up
18%.
Analysts had expected a slightly bigger price increase as
Posco has lagged rivals in raising prices and as iron ore and coking coal
prices, which account for more than a fifth of production costs, have soared this
year. “The price hike is slightly less than we expected but the increase will
help absorb rising raw material costs and put it on track to meet its 2008
target of 4.8 trillion won in operating profit,” said Jung Ji-yun, analyst at
CJ Investment and Securities.
Shares in Posco, the second largest company in
Even after the price increases, Posco’s products are still
as much as $230 a tonne cheaper than those made by rivals and imported goods—a
price discrepancy that has created tight supply in the South Korean market and
prompted some distributors to sell more to overseas destinations such as China,
which enjoys strong demand and firmer prices.
Nippon Steel Corp., the world’s No.2 steel maker, cut its
full-year profit forecast by a bigger-than-expected 6.7% last month due to
higher costs of freight and raw materials, and predicted its first earnings
drop in six years.
“A price rise was inevitable because of rising cost pressure
and it continues to remain difficult to secure raw material supplies as mining
firms are lukewarm on negotiations, despite soaring prices,” Posco said in a
statement.
The term price of iron ore has risen fivefold since 2001, while
coal prices have surged this year because of strong demand from