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United Kingdom Metals Report Q3 2009

Product Type: Market Research Report
Published by: Business Monitor International
Published: July 2009
Product Code: R302-7375
Description
British metals producers are in serious trouble with drastic cuts in capacity and workforce expected asthey struggle to cope with falling prices and rising costs at a time of exchange rate volatility and restrictedcredit conditions, according to BMI’s latest UK Metals Report.

In the first five months of 2009, British crude steel output fell 42.6% year-on-year (y-o-y) to 3.55mntonnes. In May, output was up nearly 15% month-on-month (m-o-m) but was still down 42% y-o-y at773,000 tonnes. BMI believes that while the British steel industry may have reached a trough, it is notseeing any signs of a sustained recovery in output. Furthermore, our steel output forecasts have beenrevised down as the UK economy sinks further into recession, with GDP set to shrink 4.2% in 2009 andto stagnate in 2010. The economy will not return to its potential growth level until well into 2011.

A deep and long recession is already having a negative impact on UK metals production capacities, withCorus radically cutting back steelmaking production while aluminium smelters close their operations.

While the UK is faced with the same problems as the rest of the world, it also suffers from poor paymentperformance and suppliers reluctant to extend credit without insurance. Struggling with flagging orders,suppliers are forced into high risk lending and exposure to bad debt. This could exacerbate the problemsfacing the industry over the medium term, particularly as closures are expected in the supply chain. By2010, the steel and aluminium industries, along with distribution and consumption, are likely to be verydifferent and quite likely a lot smaller.

A major risk factor is exchange rate volatility, with BMI forecasting a weakening of pound sterlingtowards the year-end. This will raise the cost of raw materials such as coking coal, iron andbauxite/alumina. With producers struggling to pass on cost rises to their customers, BMI believes thatthey will incur substantial operating losses in 2009 and into 2010, and that a significant amount ofcapacity will be taken offline, possibly permanently. An additional factor is the solvency crisis acrossBritish industry, combined with a lack of credit availability which will ensure that metals purchases willremain low until at least Q110.

Steel output is set to plunge to levels not seen since the 1970s as the country’s largest steelmaker, Corus,slashes output in response to the slump in the international steel market. Corus launched a restructuringprogramme involving capacity cuts in January. In Q109, Corus said it had 40% of its production capacitysitting idle in response to a 40% cut in orders. In May, Corus’s lenders agreed to reset the terms andconditions of a GBP3.7bn (US$5.6bn) loan that was taken at the time of Tata Steel’s acquisition ofCorus, although this will not ensure future financing. Meanwhile, UK Prime Minister Gordon Brown haspersonally intervened in the campaign to save Corus’s Teeside Cast Products (TCP) plant and the jobsof its 3,000 workers. The plant’s woes are related to the cancellation of orders by a four-memberinternational consortium led by Italy’s Marcegaglia, which tore up a 10-year contract signed in 2004 totake nearly 78% of the plant’s output up to 2015. Marcegaglia and Dongkuk signed a MoU to buy TCPin January, but by June had yet to announce their intentions with the plan thrown into doubt by the drasticcut in orders.

BMI estimates that the decline in steel output in 2009 will total around 35%, with 8.77mn tonnes of crudesteel produced. The aluminium industry will also fare badly with BMI estimating a 43% fall in output to185,000 tonnes. The planned closure of Rio Tinto Alcan’s Anglesey smelter in September 2009, inresponse to a lack of long-term supply of cheap electricity, will reduce primary aluminium productioncapacity to 221,000 tonnes per annum (tpa). This development, along with projected cuts in output, willdrag primary aluminium production down to 185,000 tonnes in 2009, a 42% y-o-y fall. BMI does notexpect output to reach full capacity until 2013, but without Anglesey it will still be 40% down on 2007levels. Additionally, there is a reduction in secondary aluminium capacity, with aluminium alloy producerF E Mottram (Non Ferrous) Ltd going into voluntary administration in June. The company hadsmelting capacity of 25,000 tpa and was one of the largest secondary aluminium producers in the UK.

Most of its customers are in the automotive industry, such as Nissan, Honda and Toyota.
Table of Contents
SWOT Analysis
United Kingdom Political SWOT
United Kingdom Economic SWOT
Global Metals Market Overview
Table: World’s Top 10 Steel Producing Countries, 2007 And 2008
Aluminium Outlook
Table: BMI Aluminium Forecast
Copper Outlook
Table: BMI Copper Forecast
Metals Price Outlook
Table: Stock Levels At London Metals Exchange Warehouses (tonnes)
Global Mining Outlook
Table: Biggest Chinese Acquisitions In Australia Since 2005
Table: Global Mining - Top Five Companies By Market Capitalisation (US$mn)
Table: Global Mining - Key Players’ Future Investment Plans (selected projects)
Regional Overview
Industry Forecast Scenario
Table: Metals Industry, 2006-2013
Macroeconomic Outlook
Table: United Kingdom - Macroeconomic Forecasts
Competitive Landscape
Aluminium
Steel
Company Profiles
Corus
Rio Tinto Alcan
Global Assumptions
Table: Global Assumptions, 2007-2013
Table: Developed States GDP Growth, 2008-2010
Table: Emerging Markets GDP Growth, 2008-2010
Table: Commodity Prices, 2007-2010
BMI Forecast Modelling
How We Generate Our Industry Forecasts
Cross Checks
Ordering and More Information
Price and Delivery Options



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