Japanese Steel Producers: February Orders Indicate Fragile Stabilization
Core Conclusion
Domestic demand for ordinary steel has likely bottomed, with February orders turning positive year-over-year after prior contraction. However, the recovery lacks conviction due to sequential monthly decline and persistent weakness in key end-markets, justifying a cautious industry stance.
Evidence Chain
Overall Demand Stabilization is Marginal and Sequential Momentum is Negative
The shift to positive YoY growth suggests the deepest demand erosion has passed, but the MoM decline indicates stabilization is tentative. Domestic orders rose +0.52% YoY to 2.72 million tonnes in February, improving from January's -0.04% YoY, but fell -1.2% on a MoM basis. This implies underlying demand remains soft and a sustained upturn is not yet evident. Investors should treat this data as a sign of potential bottoming, not a catalyst for broad sector re-rating.
Construction Demand Continues to Deteriorate
The construction sector remains a clear drag on overall steel consumption, with no signs of inflection. Construction orders fell -4.7% YoY to 0.62 million tonnes and were down -2.6% MoM. This marks a continuation of the downtrend, pressured by sluggish activity. Companies with high exposure to construction, such as Kobe Steel (5406.T) and Tokyo Steel (5423.T), face structural headwinds that are not priced for a near-term rebound.
Manufacturing Recovery is Narrow and Key Industries Remain Weak
Manufacturing demand provides limited offset, as growth is modest and concentrated outside major sectors. While total manufacturing orders increased +1.5% YoY to 1.24 million tonnes, auto orders fell -2.1% YoY and shipbuilding declined -2.7% YoY. Industrial machinery was essentially flat at -0.4% YoY. The MoM manufacturing increase of +1.4% offers a slight positive signal but is insufficient to counter broader weakness. Firms like Nippon Steel (5401.T), with its Overweight rating, may find relative support from general manufacturing, but autos and shipbuilding exposure remains a liability.
Key Divergences and Risks
The primary risk is that the marginal YoY improvement proves temporary, and demand relapses into contraction if macroeconomic conditions weaken. The divergence between weak construction/autos and slightly better general manufacturing creates an uneven earnings landscape, increasing stock-specific volatility. Export demand, a component not detailed in this release but historically significant, could introduce additional unpredictability to revenue streams.
Valuation or Trade Implications
The data supports a selective, non-consensus approach favoring manufacturers with less cyclical exposure. Nippon Steel's (5401.T) Overweight rating appears aligned with its diversified manufacturing base. In contrast, the Underweight ratings on Kobe Steel (5406.T) and Tokyo Steel (5423.T) are reinforced by their construction reliance. Equal-weight ratings on JFE Holdings (5411.T) and Hanwa (8078.T) suggest a neutral wait-and-see stance is prudent. A tactical trade would be to underweight the construction-exposed names until order data shows a definitive, multi-month improvement in that segment.
Appendix Data Summary
| Metric | Volume (Mn Tonnes) | YoY Change | MoM Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Total Domestic Orders | 2.72 | +0.52% | -1.2% |
| Construction Orders | 0.62 | -4.7% | -2.6% |
| Manufacturing Orders | 1.24 | +1.5% | +1.4% |
| of which: Autos | 0.61 | -2.1% | N/A |
| of which: Ind. Machinery | 0.21 | -0.4% | N/A |
| of which: Shipbuilding | 0.23 | -2.7% | N/A |