German steel industry sees modest recovery in 2013

German steelindus

German steel production will return to modest growth next year as companies rebuild stocks and demand from the automotive and engineering sectors picks up, a trade group forecast on Tuesday.

Europe’s steel industry has been hit by a slowdown in demand for cars, appliances and new buildings as an austerity drive aimed at reducing budget deficits has hampered economic growth.

German steelindus

Germany, Europe’s biggest economy, has been one of the strongest performers, but is also struggling.

Its steel association sees German crude steel output edging up by 1 percent to 43.0 million tonnes in 2013, after a 4 percent decline this year, on the back of rising production of cars and factory equipment.

The automotive, engineering and construction industries account for almost 80 percent of steel consumption in Germany.

“But in the current general economic situation no drastic recovery of the steel sector is to be expected next year,” the association’s President Hans Juergen Kerkhoff said.

His comments echo gloomy forecasts by German steel companies such as ThyssenKrupp (TKAG.DE) and Salzgitter (SZGG.DE).

ThyssenKrupp axed half of its management board this month, including the head of its steel business, as it posted a steep loss due to an ill-advised foray into the Americas and saw profits at its European steel business slide.

Salzgitter, Germany’s second-biggest steel company, meanwhile has plans for what its Chief Executive Heinz Joerg Fuhrmann has called a “far-reaching” shakeup to reverse losses at its steel business.

The German steel association sees global crude steel output growing by almost 4 percent to about 1.6 billion tonnes in 2013.

“But overall, the economic environment remains difficult in 2013,” it said, adding it sees production of rolled steel products in Europe stabilising at a low level as the market in debt-laden southern European countries continues to shrink.

Credit rating agency Moody’s warned this month that declining demand and weak prices would hurt profitability in Europe’s steel sector next year.

 

source: Reuters