Home > Steel News > Latest Steel News > China’s...

China’s weak property sector putting Indian steel producers under pressure

Tuesday, 23 July 2024 17:00:18 (GMT+3)   |   Kolkata

The poor performance of China’s property sector since 2021 has created significant overcapacity in the country's steel industry, leading to a collapse in global prices of steel and putting Indian steel producers under significant pressure, according to India’s Economic Survey 2023-24 placed before the Indian parliament on Monday, July 22.

China’s manufacturing trade surplus has been ballooning since 2019 due to weak domestic demand and expanding industrial capacity and this has led to Chinese companies exploring markets overseas, leading to prices collapsing globally and driving other national producers out of business, especially in product categories where China dominates, stated the survey, prepared by the ministry of finance and placed before parliament on the eve of the presentation of the national budget for 2024-25.

For instance, China’s steel product exports have grown 27 percent so far in 2024 on top of a 35 percent growth last year, the survey noted.

India started as a net exporter of steel in the first quarter of the financial year 2023-24 but became a net importer in subsequent quarters - again becoming a net importer of steel after having achieved net exporter status in the last decade.

“This was largely driven by price differentials between international and domestic prices of finished steel. Low prices in the international market led to reduced profit margins for exports and made imports more affordable, affecting the trade balance in steel,” the survey said.

India imported 1.9 million mt of finished steel during the April-June quarter of the fiscal year 2024-25, which was 28 percent more than the same period a year earlier. Exports of steel during this period fell by 36 percent year on year to 1.3 million mt, widening India’s net imports. India’s apparent steel consumption during the quarter was 35 million mt.

“Developing countries will have to figure out a way of meeting the import competition from China and, at the same time, boosting domestic manufacturing capabilities, sometimes with the collaboration of Chinese investment and technology,” the survey said.


Similar articles

India-EU FTA agreement likely to be concluded by end of 2025

12 Jun | Steel News

India and UK finalise FTA

07 May | Steel News

India likely to approve $3 billion fund for development of shipping sector

30 Apr | Steel News

India and New Zealand resume FTA talks stalled since 2015

17 Mar | Steel News

India and EU commence talks on FTA in Brussels after eight-year gap

10 Mar | Steel News

India and UK resume talks on FTA under cloud of US tariff threats

25 Feb | Steel News

India’s port handling capacity to be expanded to 10 billion mt per year by 2047

24 Jan | Steel News

Indian government announces measures to ease bottlenecks in export-imports

30 Sep | Steel News

Rising freight costs and container shortages to hit Indian exports

17 Sep | Steel News

India’s trade deficit in steel widens to $516 million in April-May

27 Jun | Steel News