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Iran conflict disrupts China’s Middle East steel imports

Iran conflict disrupts China’s Middle East steel imports
Iran conflict disrupts China’s Middle East steel imports

Analysts and traders said that some Chinese steel exporters had'stopped offering to Middle East customers as the conflict with Iran chokes the shipping through the Straits of Hormuz. Shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, between Iran and Oman, has come to a halt as a result of the conflict with Iran. Iran has retaliated by attacking vessels in the region as a retaliation for U.S. The straits not only handle a significant portion of oil trade but also a major route for China's exports of steel to the Gulf. This region has grown to be its second biggest market and accounted for 16% of China's exports in the past year, as other countries erected trade barriers. According to reports by four Chinese steel consultancies and a steel dealer, some 'Chinese steelmakers' have stopped shipping new cargoes into the Gulf due to disruptions in shipping. A steel trader in East China said, "You have no choice. Ship companies are not currently assigning vessels near the Persian Gulf markets." He spoke on condition of anonymity as he wasn't authorised to talk to the media. "Without ships, you don't have a shipping guide;?and, without both, it is hard for us to make an offering," said the trader, who?said that they were closely watching developments in the area.

In spite of growing protectionism on traditional markets like Vietnam and South Korea, the pivot towards the Middle East has been a major factor in the surprising resilience of Chinese exports to these countries over the past three years. Analysts at Shanghai Metals Market stated in a Monday note that China's exports of steel to countries in the Middle East will likely plummet in the short-term, increasing domestic supply pressures and lowering prices. (Reporting and editing by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)