Case File
efta-01385462DOJ Data Set 10OtherEFTA01385462
Date
Unknown
Source
DOJ Data Set 10
Reference
efta-01385462
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
Extracted Text (OCR)
Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
3 January 2018
HY Corporate Credit
HY Multi Sector,Media. Cable & Satellite
Inequalities within the International Steel Markets
The global steel industry is structurally oversupplied due to certain geographies
that produce far more of the man-made material than demand in those regions
warrants. While we acknowledge some regions are supported by production
in nearby geographies, we believe this analysis provides some useful insight
into the global supply glut and the relevant geographies that such excess steel
originates in. In Figure 22 below, positive figures reflect an excess of supply
(highlighted in red), whereas negative numbers indicate a production deficit.
Based on our analysis of supply and demand by geography, while the market
in 2016 appears to be at a deficit (shown in Figure 22), a number of meaningful
dislocations exist across the spectrum. According to the data, Asia and CIS
collectively manufactured a surplus of 111mn mtpa of steel while every other
region experienced a deficit in 2016. Considering steel is a global commodity,
excess steel manufactured in China and CIS likely satisfies demand for steel in
alternative regions of the world that may lack the capacity to manufacture
adequate steel to meet their needs, such as the Middle East and Africa. Other
worldwide regions such as the European Union, Other Europe, South America
and Oceania are comparatively self-sufficient, for the most part producing the
supply of steel that each of their markets necessitate in a given year. In yet
another example, historically North America (NA) has required steel imports to
satisfy some portion of its apparent demand. However, in recent years foreign
manufacturers have begun targeting NA as an alternative market to their own
respective domestic markets and shipping their excess steel to NA considering
that NA benefits from a stronger pricing environment than the rest of the world.
iiigure 22: Geographical Dislocations in Supply Demand l(X)0's of metric tonnes}
Olobel SOS Supply I D88448110000
2007
2006
2009
2010
2011
2012
20111
2:0111
2015
2010
ASIA
42.199
363/3
'1.9281
17,964
31,892
83160
43318
145.400
741114
EUROPEAN UNION
NORTH AMERICA
113,3751
134,51031
(6,5141
129.4421
9.403
115.4291
10.491
119,7411
5.172
123,7771
14176
131.8791
9.354
130,5251
6.914
14141111
11,751
144.415
keill
1.410621
Ir
3
as
51911
57.310
56.939
52.724
49,425
45,059
41970
42.727
44.847
47.673
OTHER EUROPE
11,5701
2.150
4.446
3.024
4.426
3.792
15161
19021
16.673
(5.5391
SOUTH AMERKA
4,921
844.
2.330
(3,6601
1121601
151641
Inn)
16,1/21
13134
(7671
MIDDLE EAST
MAGA
131.9261
(13171
137.6181
1121571
132.3301
117.256)
cum
1131436I
132,8891
116,3121
130,6821
1201241
130.5431
133,7W
1292181
125.8221
129.054
121331
1262471
atm
OCEANIA
16511
11.1211
17681
{6891
14971
(2166)
11 9391
129311
12 507
Global Steel Surplus /(NA ri
17101
7
5.482
23.443
14.9130
6,101
11091)
12115
3,561
Sp.s.ce 04.4-som 84/. 61940-0.89 onr.044.0. it. Amy Stew Assmvam
arbitraging the North American and European steel markets
While NA and the EU both require a portion of their steel needs imported, a
different phenomenon has taken shape in these regions. Formerly captive
markets, NA and EU had historically succeeded in largely achieving equilibrium
between supply and demand given their solid manufacturing platforms in each
region that could ramp up and fulfill incremental demand. However, the onset
of globalization marked an end to their steel independence. Since steel prices
in NA and EU tend to be higher than in other regions that generate surpluses,
offshore steelmakers (particularly in China) have begun shipping excess steel
to territories with higher prevailing selling prices to the detriment of domestic
manufacturers. This influx of cheaper (and likely government-subsidized) steel
into NA and the EU has pressured pricing, forcing producers to reduce selling
prices to maintain volumes with customers. More, we question whether some
foreign steelmakers are benefitting from subsidies on exports, affording them
the ability to sell their products at lower prices than they otherwise could and
still realize a profit. Unfortunately, over time such competitive advantages over
domestic steel producers has led to bankruptcies and the closure of thousands
of insolvent steelmaking facilities unable to compete against cheaper imports.
Consequently, this inequality has caused the remaining steel manufacturers to
appeal to their respective governments to put in place protective tariffs on
unfairly "dumped" steel imports in order to achieve a fair and level playing field.
Page 188
Deutsche Bank Securities Inc.
CONFIDENTIAL - PURSUANT TO FED. R. CRIM. P. 6(e)
DB-SDNY-0086747
CONFIDENTIAL
SDNY_GM_00232931
EFTA01385462
Technical Artifacts (2)
View in Artifacts BrowserEmail addresses, URLs, phone numbers, and other technical indicators extracted from this document.
Phone
14141111Phone
8448110000Forum Discussions
This document was digitized, indexed, and cross-referenced with 1,500+ persons in the Epstein files. 100% free, ad-free, and independent.
Annotations powered by Hypothesis. Select any text on this page to annotate or highlight it.