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Arconic to idle Al rolling capacity in Texas

  • : Metals
  • 19/11/05

US rolled aluminum producer Arconic will idle its San Antonio, Texas, micromill by the end of 2019, the latest in a series of budget cutting measures by the global aluminum industry.

The advanced mill can produce coils of aluminum sheet from molten metal in less than an hour whereas conventional mills take days to complete the same process. The facility produces specialized materials for the aerospace and automotive markets.
Large aluminum companies are reducing investments and attempting to run leaner operations at a time when measurements of manufacturing, such as the European and US purchasing managers' indexes (PMI), indicate contraction.Aluminum prices also are falling, with the midwest transaction price, used in pricing finished aluminum, dropping by 14pc in the third quarter from a year earlier.

Alcoa in July sold two primary aluminum smelters in Spain and divested itself of a rolling mill joint venture with Saudi Arabia's Ma'aden mining company to focus on its core assets. Norwegian integrated primary aluminum maker Norsk Hydro, which has some operations in the US, also plans to cut costs over the next several years.

Arconic boosted its global rolled aluminum shipments by 6pc to 351,000t in the third quarter from a year earlier, driven by strong demand across "all key markets."

Revenue rose to $3.6bn, a 1pc gain from the year earlier quarter, including the effects of recent divestitures and fluctuations in aluminum pricing and currency exchange. Excluding those factors, revenue grew by 6pc from a year earlier.

The company cut its 2019 revenue guidance to $14.15bn-14.35bn, from the prior quarter's forecast of $14.3-14.6bn, citing lower aluminum prices and divestitures.

Profit fell to $95mn from $161mn a year earlier as Arconic took $108mn in non-cash asset impairments.


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Alabama lock expected to reopen late April


24/12/18
24/12/18

Alabama lock expected to reopen late April

Houston, 18 December (Argus) — The main chamber of the Wilson Lock in Alabama along the Tennessee River is tentatively scheduled to reopen in four months, according to the US Army Corps of Engineers (Corps). The Corps expects to finish phase two of dewatering repairs on the lock on 20 April, after which navigation can resume through the main chamber of the lock. The timeline for reopening may shift depending on final assessments, the Corps said. Delays at the lock average around 12 days through the auxiliary chamber, according to the Lock Status Report by the Corps. Delays at the lock should wane during year-end holidays but pick up as spring approaches, barge carriers said. The main chamber of the Wilson Lock will have been closed for nearly seven months by the April reopening after closing on 25 September . By Meghan Yoyotte Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

ArcelorMittal increases EU HRC offer


24/12/18
24/12/18

ArcelorMittal increases EU HRC offer

London, 18 December (Argus) — ArcelorMittal has increased its hot-rolled coil (HRC) offer by €20/t to €630/t across Europe. The mill has greater visibility over its order book after concluding contractual business and sees firmer apparent demand in the first quarter, including from the automotive industry. Suppliers, and the market at large, expect import volumes to fall in the first quarter owing to the dumping case against Egypt, Japan, India and Vietnam, and the 15pc cap on other countries' volumes. The European Commission's review of its safeguard, from which changes could be implemented in April — rather than July as has typically been the case — could also further tighten arrivals. Sources suggest quota volumes could be reduced, in line with softer EU production and demand, and that all developing economies could some in scope of the safeguard. In the 4A hot-dip galvanised market, there could also be a cap imposed on each country selling into the 'other countries' quota, while for HRC, countries with their own quota might not be able to access 30pc of the 'other countries' quota in the final April-June quarter. Some traders are totally stepping back from importing as a result of the measures, trying to find different ways to do business domestically. A Benelux-based HRC producer has also pulled its offer, and is expected to return in January at higher prices, sources suggest. By Colin Richardson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: More US met coal consolidation ahead


24/12/18
24/12/18

Viewpoint: More US met coal consolidation ahead

London, 18 December (Argus) — Expectations that weak seaborne coking coal prices in the last quarter of 2024 will carry over to 2025 in the face of low steel prices is pointing to further consolidation among US coking coal producers. Consol Energy and Arch Resources set up the most significant merger of 2024 for the US market , with the merged company expected to generate $110mn-140mn of cost savings and "operational synergies" within 6-18 months of the close of the transaction. But continuing cost pressures will likely lead to closures of smaller high-cost mines, not uncommon in the past when US coking coal prices have reached a down cycle. The fob Australia premium low volatile (PLV) coking coal price fell from this summer's high of $260/t in early July to average $203.46/t from the start of October, translating to prices that are below cost for many US producers. In recent years, price volatility and lack of liquidity, particularly in the Atlantic market, has meant many buyers have chosen to buy at index-linked prices, often with fob Australia indexes. The fob US east coast price has averaged $192.84/t for the current quarter, while the high volatile A fob Hampton Road price has averaged $186.47/t in the same period, prices cited by many US producers at near or even below cost after taking into consideration rail and port handling charges. Lower cost longwall miners like Alpha Met Resources reported an average sale cost of $114.27/short ton ($125.96/t) in the third quarter for metallurgical coal, Arch Resources reported $93.81/st for the same and Warrior Met Coal indicated $120.21/st. But others such as Corsa are in clear loss-making territory at $169/st. After freight and handling charges, many of these producers will have fob equivalent costs closer to $170-190/t or even above $200/t for smaller continuous mining operations. The poor margins has also meant US producers like Ramaco have cut back their guidance while lost output capacity has failed to lift prices . Last month, many US producers have already looked to reduce shifts by extending time off for the holidays and hunting season. But this has still failed to stem supplies, particularly in the high volatile coal segment where traders and suppliers that had secured tonnes earlier this year or more recently via term contracts have been offering prices at steep discounts for on-water cargoes to Asia and port stocks in China. US producers have been focusing their efforts on sales to Asia in the face of weak demand in Europe, leading to the absence of much incremental coking coal demand in the region since last year. In a time of high fob Australia prices, margins for US sales to Asia might have been attractive. But with low Australian prices and competition from Russia and Mongolia continuing to grow, the second half of 2024 has seen poor margins for US sales to Asia. While Russian mining costs have risen, they are still well under the levels in the US. Industry sources peg average production cost for open-pit mining in the Kuzbass region at $18.37-35.75/t, excluding value-added tax (VAT), while underground mining stands at $24.83-60.58/t, excluding VAT, according to sources at Russian coal mining companies. Russian coal is also typically discounted to account for sanctions and difficulties with payments, and more recently the export duty on Russian coking coal was removed. US president-elect Donald Trump's threat to impose import tariffs on all imports from China has drawn concern in the market about China imposing retaliatory tariffs on US coal. In a well-supplied market and the presence of strong competing producing countries at key import destinations, many US producers expect they will have to absorb any increase in tariff to secure sales to China. At a recent industry conference in Prague, several participants indicated the fob Australia PLV index should be in the region of $220-225/t to be sustainable for the wider industry. By Siew Hua Seah Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Viewpoint: Japan to continue filling bulk scrap demand


24/12/18
24/12/18

Viewpoint: Japan to continue filling bulk scrap demand

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