The growing production as Chinese mills bid to profit from prices that soared in 2016 and into this year are undermining the government's years-long push to cut capacity to make the steel industry more efficient and tackle smog.
Beijing's crackdown has mainly targeted low-grade products like rebar, used mostly for construction.
Rising inventory levels and recent falls in the prices, though, suggest output has been growing faster than China's actual demand.
The most-active steel rebar futures prices were down 1.15 percent at 2,918 yuan ($423.90) per tonne at 0243 GMT, on track for a 7.8 percent drop in April, their worst monthly performance since May last year.
Biden’s New Carbon Capture Mandates Will Cause Blackouts, Increases Prices
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The lie of the day is from the EPA: Carbon capture will pay for itself
(thanks to IRA subsidies). No, it won't even with subsidies. Expect
blackouts and a ...
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