Posted on 20 Oct 2015
Safeguard duty fails to stem steel imports as intl prices fall further
The
safeguard duty imposed by the Indian government on
hot rolled coils a month back has failed to stem imports as international prices have fallen further amid high inventory levels.
Total
steel imports
in the first half through September rose 42% to 5.93 million tonnes.
Imports from Japan and Korea were up 80% and 77% respectively. China
accounted for 1.59 million tonne of imports and altogether imports from
China, Japan and Korea stood at 4.28 million tonne.
Imports of hot rolled products rose 83% to 2.91 million tonne from 1.59
tonne. Here again, China, Japan and Korea together accounted for 2.25
million tonne of imports, up 88%.
Imports from Japan were up 135% and Korea by 220%.
Inventory levels were also higher than March-end.
"Following the imposition of the duty, the differential between
domestic and international hot rolled coil (HRC) prices had reduced
significantly and the domestic prices were largely aligned with imported
steel prices. However, international HRC prices have declined further
by around 5% after the duty was imposed which along with weak domestic
demand conditions and prospects of further capacity addition in India in
the near term were likely to keep domestic prices under check," ICRA
said in its recent report.
Does it mean that the safeguard duty has failed?
JSW director-commercial
& marketing, Jayant Acharya, says that the duty was absolutely
necessary or the situation would be far worse.
"Supply will get limited. The problem is, China has again reduced
prices and so have Japan and Korea. So there is a neutralisation
impact," he explained.
"September imports are in line with August but typically there is a lag in impact," a steel producer pointed out.
But the industry has now come up with the demand of extending the
safeguard duty to the entire value chain. "If it doesn't happen the next
target will be cold rolled products. Imports of colour coated products
have already gone up significantly," Acharya said.
The government has also taken steps on the infrastructure side, which
could help boost demand. Acharya says that the demand push from the
government's measures in highways, roadways, power transmission lines,
solar would only be visible next year.
The ICRA report said that while the growth remained steady at upwards
of 6% during the first three months, it declined to 0.5% in July 2015,
indicating that demand scenario was still uncertain.
Domestic steel production growth declined to 1.3% during the period April-July 2015 from 3.3% registered in FY15.
That said, India is one of the few countries that is growing. World
Steel Association recently said: "Steel demand in India and Mexico and
other countries in the ASEAN and MENA regions is expected to maintain
growth momentum despite the adverse external environment due to positive
domestic demand and progress in reform."