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As steel demand patterns shift globally, recent inventory data from key Asian economies offers valuable insight into near-term supply trends. SteelBazaar reviews weekly scrap stock movements from South Korea, India, China, and Japan, revealing nuanced dynamics in their steel supply chains.
📊 Inventory Highlights (April–May 2025)
Country Peak Inventory (mmt) Current (19-May) Trend Summary
South Korea 0.93 (Apr 24) 0.81 Peaked and now easing – active melting phase underway
China 0.76 (May 9) 0.72 Steady build-up indicating cautious restocking
India 0.68 (Apr 24) 0.61 Stable trend with minor fluctuations
Japan 0.52 (Apr 24) 0.48 Flat inventory – subdued movement
🔍 SteelBazaar Insights:
South Korea continues to lead inventory levels, signaling robust furnace activity and strong steel output.
China’s gradual build-up reflects steady procurement by mills—potentially ahead of stimulus-driven demand.
India’s inventory stability suggests a well-balanced domestic scrap flow.
Japan maintains conservative stocking patterns, in line with slower production cycles.
📌 What This Means for Traders:
South Korea’s declining scrap could tighten bulk export availability. China’s restocking may lift raw material prices. For Indian scrap suppliers and buyers, timely positioning is key.
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