Latest News

Japan's FY23/24 crude steel output falls 1.1% on sluggish building and construction need

Crude steel output in Japan, the world's No. 3 manufacturer, declined by 1.1% in financial 2023/24, weighed down by sluggish demand in the construction segment and weak exports amid increasing exports from the world's leading steel producer China.

Output, which is not seasonally changed, slid to 86.83 million metric lots in the year ended March 31, marking the second successive yearly drop, the Japan Iron and Steel Federation stated on Monday.

The figure represents the most affordable level given that fiscal 2020/21 year when a demand collapse caused by the COVID-19 pandemic pushed production to its floor in about 50 years, according to an analyst at the federation.

In the building sector, demand remained slow due to skyrocketing product costs and hold-ups in building and construction schedules caused by labour shortages, he said.

Exports were also lacklustre regardless of the yen's. devaluation, reflecting the rise in steel exports by China,. he included.

In March, Chinese steel exports reached 9.89 million. lots, the greatest for a month given that July 2016, bringing the. first-quarter overall to 25.8 million even as general exports in. the world's second-largest economy contracted sharply.

Japan's steel production for March dropped 3.9 % from a year. earlier to 7.2 million loads, the federation stated, though output. increased 2.9 % from February.

A slump in Japan's auto production after a safety test. scandal at Toyota Motor's little automobile unit also slowed. steel need in the January-March quarter, the federation's. analyst stated.

Earlier this month, the Ministry of Economy, Trade and. Industry forecast that Japan's unrefined steel output in the. April-June quarter will likely decrease by 2.2% from a year. earlier, keeping in mind slack need in building and construction and non-automobile. manufacturing sectors.

(source: Reuters)