

Pipe and tube
Overview
OCTG (oil country tubular goods) and Line Pipe pricing sits at the intersection of two complex markets – demand from the oil and gas industry and supply from steel markets.
Argus monitors and delivers key OCTG and line pipe price data while analysing supply and demand markets to produce detailed market reports and outlooks on pipe prices and market drivers.
Latest pipe and tube news
Browse the latest market moving news on the global pipe and tube industry.
US steelmakers urge no 232 tariff exclusions
US steelmakers urge no 232 tariff exclusions
Houston, 7 March (Argus) — Top leaders of US steelmakers urged President Donald Trump to resist requests to exclude or exempt steel imports from upcoming 25pc Section 232 tariffs. The chief executives of Cleveland-Cliffs, CMC, Metallus, North American Stainless, Nucor, Tenaris, US Steel, and Zekelman Industries and the treasurer of Steel Dynamics signed the letter sent to Trump on Friday. Trump is set to put the 25pc Section 232 steel and aluminum tariffs into effect on 12 March, removing all tariff rate quota (TRQ) and nontariffed agreements. In the letter, the leaders said the original 25pc national security 232 tariffs implemented in March 2018 led to steel imports dropping "significantly," and allowed for over $20bn in upgrades and new mills. Utilization rates were also said to have increased. US steelmakers have both shuttered facilities and added millions of tons of production since 2018, with closures mainly from older, iron ore-based blast furnaces while new and upgraded scrap-based electric arc furnace (EAF) mills have added capacity. In the letter, the steelmakers added that steel tariff exemptions since 2018 allowed for higher import volumes, "even for products readily available from domestic suppliers." US steel import volumes fell in 2018 and 2019 and were 9.14mn metric tonnes (t) lower in 2019 than in 2017, the year before tariffs were imposed. They fell by another 5.3mn t in 2020, when the Covid-19 pandemic led to broad shutdowns in the US and global economies. Imports have oscillated wildly since then, up by 9.57mn t in 2021, before falling year over year in 2022 and 2023. Imports were up by 641,600t in 2024 from the prior year. By Rye Druzchetta US steel product imports t Year Imports YoY Change (t) Change (%) 2017 34,472,508 na na 2018 30,573,530 -3,898,978 -11.3% 2019 25,332,481 -5,241,049 -17.1% 2020 20,032,166 -5,300,315 -20.9% 2021 29,601,055 9,568,889 47.8% 2022 28,076,057 -1,524,998 -5.2% 2023 25,583,086 -2,492,971 -8.9% 2024 26,224,660 641,574 2.5% US Department of Commerce Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
US adds 151,000 jobs in February, unemployment up
US adds 151,000 jobs in February, unemployment up
Houston, 7 March (Argus) — The US added 151,000 nonfarm jobs in February and the unemployment rate ticked higher, but federal jobs fell, possibly reflecting the first of the mass layoffs launched by the new US administration. The job growth was under the 160,000 jobs forecast by analysts surveyed by Trading Economics. It followed upwardly revised job growth of 323,000 in January and downwardly revised growth of 125,000 in December, marking downward combined revisions of 2,000 reported Friday by the Labor Department. Monthly job gains averaged 168,000 over the prior 12 months. Unemployment rose to 4.1pc from 4pc. Average hourly earnings grew at a 4pc annual rate, down from 4.1pc in the prior period. Manufacturing added 10,000 jobs in February, with motor vehicles and parts adding 9,000 jobs. Mining and logging added 5,000. Health care added 52,000 jobs in February, financial activities added 21,000 jobs and transportation and warehousing added 18,000 jobs. Retail trade fell by 11,000. Federal jobs fell by 10,000 in February, possibly reflecting the first of the mass layoffs launched by the new US administration earlier last month. While federal government jobs fell, state and local government jobs grew by 20,000. The employment report comes one day after employment consultancy Challenger, Grey & Christmas reported that US-based employers announced 172,000 job cuts in February, the highest for the month since 2009 , led by federal job cuts. Federal government job cuts totaled 62,242 announced by 17 different agencies as part of the Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)'s mass layoffs and contract cancellations, Challenger said. Most of the job cuts captured by Challenger were in the latter part of the month, while the government employment report is based on a survey that includes the pay period encompassing the 12th of the month. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Evraz raises US flat steel prices by $160/st
Evraz raises US flat steel prices by $160/st
Houston, 25 February (Argus) — US steelmaker Evraz North America has increased its flat steel prices by $160/short ton (st). The company announced the price move on all carbon plate, HSLA, hot-rolled coils (HRC), normalized plate, and quench and tempered plate products today. Evraz did not set a minimum price target. The price increase follows competitor Nucor's own $160/st discrete plate announcement yesterday to a published price of $1,235/st ex-works. That steelmaker also increased its HRC spot price by $40/st yesterday to $860/st, while competitor Cleveland-Cliffs increased its spot HRC price on 21 February by $100/st to $900/st. The US steel market has been reacting to threatened 25pc steel Section 232 national security tariffs, which President Donald Trump has put a 12 March deadline on reimposing on all US steel imports, eliminating current exemptions and tariff rate quota (TRQ) systems. By Rye Druzchetta Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Nucor raises spot HRC price to $860/st
Nucor raises spot HRC price to $860/st
Houston, 24 February (Argus) — US steelmaker Nucor raised its spot hot-rolled coil (HRC) price by $40/short ton (st) this morning. Nucor's consumer spot price (CSP) was raised to $860/st for its mills outside of California, where prices were increased to $920/st. Lead times are 3-5 weeks. The Argus US HRC Midwest and southern assessments both increased by $70/st last week to $850/st ex-works. Nucor competitor Cleveland-Cliffs raised its spot HRC price by $100/st to $900/st on 21 February, after more than two months of unchanged published pricing. By Rye Druzchetta Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.
Spotlight content
Browse the latest thought leadership produced by our global team of experts.
Metal Movers: What do the return of Trump tariffs mean for steel and scrap?
Insight papers - 11/02/25Steel: What is the cost of going green?
Social and political pressures have put green steel at the forefront of the agenda in the European sector, with heavy investment going into new projects and offtake deals being inked with green premiums. But what exactly is green steel, and what is its value?
Podcast - 28/11/24Metal Movers: Latin American steel - Output challenges and what comes next?
Explore all our pipe and tube products
Key price assessments
Argus prices are recognised by the market as trusted and reliable indicators of the real market value. Explore some of our most widely used and relevant price assessments.
