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Russia's Severstal anticipates steel demand to drop 5-7% as high rates harm customers

Russian steelmaker Severstal expects steel demand to visit 5% to 7% in 2024 as the high cost of obtaining raises the pressure on its consumers' investment strategies, business head Alexander Shevelev said on Tuesday.

A growing number of Russian industrial business and lobby groups are suffering excessively high interest rates and alerting that objectives for facilities advancement may be missed, with the reserve bank bearing the force of the criticism.

The Bank of Russia treked on Friday its key interest rate by 200 basis points to 21%, the greatest level given that the early years of President Vladimir Putin's guideline, when Russia was recovering from the mayhem that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union.

We see from market, from our customers, that the circumstance for them is very tense, Shevelev stated throughout a metals online forum in Moscow. Now, with such development in the essential rate, we are seeing that our customers, especially in small and medium-sized business, are merely experiencing monetary troubles.

And we see how need is beginning to decline.

Managed by billionaire Alexey Mordashov, Severstal straightened to focus locally after falling under Western sanctions in response to Russia's actions in Ukraine. Russia now accounts for 80% of its sales.

Shevelev said the main consumers of steel are the building and construction and mechanical engineering sectors, backbone industries of the Russian economy. High rates are lowering activity, reducing demand and cutting investment jobs, he stated.

Need for steel dropped 9% in the third quarter of this year, Shevelev said.

(source: Reuters)