Speakers at recently concluded BIR Fall meeting take decidedly mixed short-term outlook for non-ferrous scrap.
During the recently concluded BIR Autumn Convention, a host of speakers conveyed quite divergent outlooks for the non-ferrous market in the short term, although most noted that longer term markets should improve.
During his opening remarks, Robert Stein, the Non-Ferrous Division president, said that there is more optimism in regards to the market. “We’ve seen the worst of what the world has to give us”. Although some companies have “vanished” and many have “lost a lot of money”, the industry for the most part “is on a far better course than we were last autumn”.
In supporting his modest outlook, Stein noted “As restocking of finished non-ferrous products takes place, as the automotive industries around the world improve, as delayed construction projects are rejuvenated and people go back to their jobs, I think we can look forward to sustainable improvement in our businesses.” However, he also identified “more caution” in the marketplace as well as increased recognition among buyers that sellers require financial performance guarantees.
Guest speaker Michael Widmer, Metals Strategist with Banc of America Securities-Merrill Lynch in the U.K., was more bullish in his outlook for next year. He looked at the expected “relatively healthy rebound in GDP growth” and an improvement in metals demand next year, not least because many government stimulus packages will roll over into 2010. He ventured an average copper price for next year of $ 7,000 per metric ton.
But fellow guest speaker Günter Kirchner, secretary general of the Organisation of European Aluminium Refiners and Remelters, confessed that he is “not so sure the bad times are really over”. However, he also expressed certainty that, for the long term, recovery of aluminum from scrap will increase.
A massive leap in international aluminum scrap flows - from 427,200 metric tons in 1995 to an estimated 2.8m metric tons in 2007 - was identified by Kirchner, whose presentation also included a call for a casting alloys pricing system that provides a stable relationship between aluminum alloys and scrap which, he said, is currently “missing”.
In a review of recent BIR International Trade Council activities, Chairman Robert Voss of Voss International in the UK outlined the efforts made by BIR, with the help of BIR ambassador in India Ikbal Nathani, to ensure a smooth flow of scrap into India in response to the country’s proposed import measures.
Voss also indicated that, for companies wishing to register to supply scrap to China, the country’s General Administration of Quality Supervision, Inspection and Quarantine wants all new applicants to be certified to ISO 9001 or equivalent. However, a recent communications from AQSIQ insinuates that this requirement might not apply to those companies looking to renew their registrations.
In addition, Voss referred to the opening-up of a “channel of communication” with the credit insurance sector which could eventually lead to the development of a policy tailored to the entire scrap industry.
The meeting in Amsterdam also featured a review of latest non-ferrous scrap market conditions around the world from divisional board member Dhawal Shah of Metco Marketing in India. He pointed to “doubts” over the strength of domestic demand in China and, in particular, to the “rather somber” mood pervading the non-ferrous market in the south of the country. Meanwhile, non-ferrous trading volumes in the United States have shrunk to around 50 percent of the level of last year’s highs, he added.