Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Chinesepod - Steel and iron investment drops in 2006

BIZCHINA / Center

Steel and iron investment drops in 2006

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-03-05 17:31

China's steel and iron investment frenzy showed signs of abating in 2006
as macro-regulation began to tame five straight years of steep 20 percent
growth.

Related readings:
Profit of steel industry hits historical high
Crude steel output to reach 460m tons this year
Talk of tax rebate cuts influences steel stocks
China ranks No 1 in stainless steel output

The latest figures released by the National Bureau of Statistics (NBS)
showed that total investment in the sector amounted to 224.65 billion
yuan, down 2.5 percent year on year.

The sum represented 2.4 percent of total national investments,
significantly down on the 3.1 percent for 2005.

The steel and iron industry was the only sector that posted negative
investment growth. Others continued to climb, in particular the real
estate sector which rocketed by 21.8 percent.

Insiders pointed out that more moderate investment was the result of the
cancellation of some new projects and the shutting down of operations
that violated regulations.

NBS revised the 2006 crude steel output figures up from 418 million to
422.7 million tons.

The growth rate of crude steel production was revised upwards from 18.45
to 19.7 percent.

Steel production totaled 473.4 million tons, 6.55 million more than the
January estimate. The growth rate was recalculated at 25.3 percent.

Wang Yingwu, an analyst with Usteel.com, predicted China's crude steel
production would grow more slowly in 2007 to reach 480 million tons.

China's fixed asset investments totaled 10.99 trillion yuan in 2006, up
24 percent year on year.

(For more biz stories, please visit Industry Updates)

Chinesepod