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  Gov't bans iron and steel processing   (China Daily)  Updated: 2005-05-12 09:02  
China will start to ban iron and steel processing trade on May 19, the 
Ministry of Commerce said yesterday.
 The measure means that processors in China will be prohibited from making 
goods for overseas clients with imported iron ore, pig iron, steel scraps, 
billets or ingots provided by overseas clients.
 The iron and steel processing trade in China is now free from tariffs and 
value-added taxes on material imports and finished product exports.
 "The measure is in line with the State's macro economic controls and the 
related industry's development policy," the ministry said in a statement.
 Starting from May 19th, China will also ban rare earth and phosphorite 
processing trade.
 The ban of iron and steel processing trade is the third consecutive action 
taken by China within less than two months to tame the nation's skyrocketing 
steel exports.
 On April 1, China removed a 13-per cent tax rebate for steel billet and ingot 
exports.
 The nation slashed the tax rebate for exports of some steel products to 11 
per cent from 13 per cent on May 1.
 Analysts said the latest measure is mainly designed to plug the loophole 
created by the removal of the tax rebate on steel billet and ingot exports.
 "Many small steel makers in China turned to the processing trade after the 
export tax rebate was removed," said Qian Yi of Shanghai Steelhome Information 
Technology Co Ltd, a steel industry consulting firm. 
 The processing trade ban will have a big impact on small steel companies in 
China, Qian said yesterday in an interview with China Daily.
 China's steel exports have been shooting up since last year thanks to higher 
international steel prices than in the domestic market.
 The nation exported 5.19 million tons of steel products in the first quarter 
of this year, up 219 per cent from a year ago,statistics from the China Iron and 
Steel Association showed.
 China's steel billet exports also surged, up 971 per cent year-on-year to 
2.86 million tons during the same period.
 "The iron and steel processing trade ban is the government's attempt to 
further control steel demand, from both domestic and overseas markets, to 
prevent a resurgence of overheating investment in China's steel sector and 
excessive steel production," said Zhou Xizeng, an analyst with CITIC Securities 
Co Ltd.
 Both profligate investment in the steel sector and steel demand in China have 
been cooled by the State's macro economic controls.
 Fixed asset investment in the sector tumbled by 1.4 per cent year-on-year to 
33.22 billion yuan (US$4.01 billion) from January to March this year.
 The tumble is in sharp contrast to the whopping 106.4 per cent year-on-year 
growth in fixed asset investment in the sector in the first quarter of 2004.
 Zhou said investment in the steel sector will continue to decline this year 
due to the ban on iron and steel processing trade.
 Domestic steel demand rose by 9.79 per cent to 83.31 million tons in the 
first quarter of this year from the same period last year.
 The demand growth was down from 13 per cent in 2004 and 25.8 per cent in 
2003.
 Analysts said the ban is also an effort by the government to save energy and 
resources and ensure the sustainable development of the energy-and-resource 
hungry steel sector.
 Energy-saving will be one of priorities of the steel sector's future 
development, according to the draft of a national policy for the sector.
 The steel policy, the first of its kind in the People's Republic of China, is 
expected to be finalized and issued in the coming months.
 The steel association predicted earlier that China's iron ore imports would 
increase to 240 million tons this year from 208 million tons last year, despite 
a recent 71.5 per cent hike in international iron ore prices.
 China has been the world's No 1 steel producer since 1996, with output this 
year forecast to reach 300 million tons.
 
  
  
 
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