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ArcelorMittal rules out operating Ilva plant until May

  • Market: Metals
  • 14/11/19

The European steel market continues to be affected by uncertainty over the future of global steelmaker ArcelorMittal's Taranto plant in Italy, after the company denied claims that it will continue to operate the former Ilva operations until May.

ArcelorMittal rejected claims from local press reports and indications from market participants that it had confirmed to Puglia regional governor Michele Emiliano that it will operate the plant until May. The president of local industry association Confindustria Taranto, Antonio Marinaro, suggested yesterday that the steelmaker would operate the plant until May, after receiving a call from Emiliano.

But ArcelorMittal reiterated to Argus that it has asked the special commissioner to take back responsibility for Ilva within 30 days from the receipt of the company's withdrawal letter, sent on 4 November.

ArcelorMittal Italia is still not offering product from Ilva, market participants said, despite the reports suggesting that it would run the plant until May to avoid a legal dispute with the government.

ArcelorMittal chief executive Lakshmi Mittal is expected to meet Italian prime minister Giuseppe Conte in Rome in the coming days, although this could not be confirmed.

Domestic Italian hot-rolled coil prices have edged up this week as a result of anticipated production disruption. Argus' daily index was €389.75/t ex-works yesterday, up from €384/t on 7 November.

Colin Richardson


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South Australia closes Hydrogen Power SA office

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Australia's Coalition eyes power, resource funding cuts


02/05/25
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02/05/25

Australia's Coalition eyes power, resource funding cuts

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GM cuts guidance on up to $5bn tariff exposure


01/05/25
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01/05/25

GM cuts guidance on up to $5bn tariff exposure

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US factory activity contracts for 2nd month in April


01/05/25
News
01/05/25

US factory activity contracts for 2nd month in April

Houston, 1 May (Argus) — US manufacturing activity contracted in April for a second month, as output and new orders slowed on tariff policy uncertainty, while price gains accelerated. The Institute for Supply Management's manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) fell to 48.7 in April, down from 49 in March and the lowest since last November. The threshold between contraction and expansion is 50. The two-month contraction in manufacturing activity follows a two-month expansion preceded by 26 consecutive months of contraction. ISM's services PMI, a separate report that tracks the biggest part of the economy, showed nine months of expansion through March. "Demand and production retreated and de-staffing continued, as panelists' companies responded to an unknown economic environment," ISM said Thursday. "Prices growth accelerated slightly due to tariffs, causing new-order placement backlogs, supplier delivery slowdowns and manufacturing inventory growth." The manufacturing data follows a report Wednesday that showed the US economy contracted at an annualized 0.3pc pace in the first quarter as businesses boosted imports and stocked up on goods ahead of US import tariffs. The ISM's new-orders index came in at 47.2, higher than 45.2 in March but showing contraction for a third month. The production index fell to 44, showing a deepening contraction from 48.3 in the prior month. Employment rose by 1.8 points to 46.5, showing a slowing contraction. New export orders contracted faster at 43.1 in April, while imports entered contraction at 47.1 after barely growing, at 50.1, the prior month. The prices index rose to 69.8, up from 69.4 the prior month and signaling quickening expansion. The inventories index fell by 2.6 points to 50.8, marking a second month of expansion after six months of contraction. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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Some Liberty Speciality creditors oppose restructuring


01/05/25
News
01/05/25

Some Liberty Speciality creditors oppose restructuring

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