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Nucor Keeps Plate Prices Flat

Jul 09, 2023

Steel Products

Written by Michael Cowden

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Nucor plans to keep plate prices flat for yet another month.

“We reserve the right to review and re-quote any offers that are not confirmed with either a Nucor sales acknowledgement or written acceptance by both parties,” the Charlotte, N.C.-based steelmaker said in a letter to customers dated July 31.

Domestic plate prices have been stable compared to sheet prices on the heels of consecutive months of unchanged pricing from Nucor, one of three major US plate mills. (The others are Cleveland-Cliffs and SSAB Americas.)

Plate prices hit a 2023 peak of $1,560 per ton ($78 per cwt) in April. They have since slipped 5% to $1,485 per ton, according to SMU’s pricing tool.

Hot-rolled coil (HRC) prices also peaked in April. HRC hit a 2023 high of $1,155 per ton on April 4. It has since fallen 30% to $810 per ton.

The premium plate carries to HRC has as a result ballooned from $400 per ton in April to $675 per ton this week.

Plate could have more upside potential than sheet because it is more exposed to infrastructure spending and more widely used in big projects such as offshore wind farms.

But some market participants have questioned whether plate’s relative stability to sheet will hold as new capacity – namely, Nucor’s new plate mill in Brandenburg, Ky., – ramps up.

Plate imports have also been high in recent months:

The US imported 65,095 metric tons of cut-to-length plate in June, according to preliminary data from the Commerce Department. That marked the highest level of such imports since 66,375 metric tons in October 2017.

That said, plate imports decreased significantly in July, license data indicate.

Michael Cowden is managing editor for Steel Market Update. Cowden has covered the steel industry since 2007. He has since 2014 specialized in flat-rolled steel but has previously reported on steel long products, steel pipe and tube as well as aluminum. Before joining SMU, Cowden held reporting jobs at Fastmarkets AMM in Chicago - where he was involved in launching AMM's daily hot-rolled coil index, the Associated Press in Pittsburgh, and the Cambodia Daily in Phnom Penh. He has also worked as a copy editor and in marketing at the University of Chicago Press. Cowden has a BA in English from the University of Chicago and an MSJ journalism from Northwestern University’s Medill School of Journalism. Contact him at [email protected] or 724-759-7872.

The spread between hot-rolled coil (HRC) and galvanized coil base prices widened over the last month as hot rolled prices declined faster than prices for galvanized product.

Iron ore prices remained elevated in July, averaging $112 /dmt for the month, unchanged from June.

Rig counts in the US and Canada are back down this week according to to the latest data from oilfield services company Baker Hughes.

US steel imports look to have fallen significantly during the month of July, based off license data from the US Department of Commerce collected through July 31.

SMU's Current and Future Steel Buyers Sentiment Indices have both fallen this week from the last market check, according to our most recent survey data.

Written by Michael Cowden