: China's major steel firms lost 53.1 billion yuan ($8.07 billion) from January to November last year, as prices fell because of overcapacity and slumping demand, the China Iron and Steel Association (CISA) said on Monday.
China's steel sector, responsible for around half of global output, has been one of the biggest casualties of the country's economic slowdown, with prices now at multidecade lows as a result of a massive supply glut. China's total annual crude steel capacity is now 1.2 billion tonnes, CISA's chairman Zhang Guangning said in a speech at the association's annual conference last week that was posted on the group's website Monday.
With about a third of the country's total capacity now standing idle, Zhang said China has still not established a mechanism that would allow lossmaking steel enterprises to exit the market. "Some enterprises want to exit, but an exit route has not been opened up...and some local governments continue to urge steel firms to produce in the interests of local economic development and social stability," said Zhang, who is also chairman of the stateowned Anshan Iron and Steel Group.
He said CISA member firms saw their total earnings decline 19.3 per cent over the 11 months, with more than half making losses, he said. The association consists of around 100 medium and large steel mills covering nearly 80 per cent of national output. Steel consumption in China peaked in 2013, while output in the world's biggest producer peaked the following year, Zhang said.
"The period of high market demand growth has already passed into history, and from now on...overall demand will slowly decline," he said. Crude steel output in China fell 2.2 per cent to 738.4 million tonnes in the first 11 months of 2015, but apparent steel demand fell 5.5 per cent to 645 million tonnes over the 11month period, Zhang said. Exports have offered a lifeline for Chinese steelmakers, with falling domestic prices allowing them to undercut overseas producers, leading to a surge in trade disputes.
SOurce: Economic Times