China Steel to Increase Prices After Demand Climbs
China Steel Corp., Taiwan’s largest producer, will
increase domestic prices for the first time in three months after demand
climbed.
Prices will rise an
average of 2.9 percent for March contracts, the Kaohsiung-based company said on
13 January in a statement. The mill announced in October increases in some
prices charged to Taiwan customers for December.
Taiwan’s output of base metals advanced 29 percent
in the 11 months to November because of demand from users including
construction companies, automakers and shipbuilders, the Ministry of Economic
Affairs said Dec. 23. Price increases will help the mill cover rising costs.
Prices of hot-rolled coil, a benchmark product,
will increase by an average NT$973 ($33.5) a metric ton, the Taiwanese company
said in the statement.
China Steel climbed 0.6 percent to close at
NT$33.60 in Taipei trading before the announcement. The stock has risen 14
percent in the past six months, compared with an 18 percent gain in the
benchmark Taiex index.
Plate Prices
The company will increase plate prices by an
average NT$824 a tonne and cold-rolled steel by
NT$661, according to the statement. It will raise prices of hot-dipped
zinc-galvanized sheets by NT$1,252. Prices of bar and wire rods, electro-
galvanized sheets and electrical sheets will remain unchanged.
No percentage changes were given for the types of
products in the statement.
Iron ore prices more than doubled in the past two
years, according to the Steel Index, on a surge in demand from India and China.
Raw materials account for 70 percent of the mill’s costs, Chairman Tsou Jo-chi said in November.