
1. The Pricing Update: Nucor, North America’s largest steel producer, increased its Hot Rolled Coil (HRC) spot price by $10, reaching $960 per short ton. This is significant because Nucor’s pricing often sets the benchmark for the entire North American market, leading other major producers like U.S. Steel and Cleveland-Cliffs to follow suit.
2. Raw Material Pressures: The increase is largely a response to a sharp rise in production costs:
- Ferrous Scrap: As an EAF (Electric Arc Furnace) producer, Nucor relies heavily on scrap. Prime scrap prices jumped to $415 per gross ton in January due to winter logistics issues and low year-end inventories.
- Coking Coal Crisis: Heavy flooding in Australia (due to Cyclone Koji) disrupted global coking coal supplies, pushing prices to an 18-month high ($228/mt). While Nucor doesn’t use coal, this spike forces competitors with blast furnaces to raise their prices, giving Nucor more “pricing power.”
3. Market Demand – A “Tale of Two Cities”: The 2026 outlook shows a divided market:
- Growth: Data center construction is a massive driver for steel demand.
- Stagnation: Traditional sectors like automotive and agricultural equipment are struggling due to high interest rates and uncertainty regarding new trade tariffs.
4. Future Risks (Q1 & Q2 2026): The summary highlights that this price increase might be “transient.” If broad industrial demand doesn’t catch up by March, there is a risk that prices could fall back below $950/ton in the second quarter. The market is currently being sustained more by supply constraints (weather, coal shortages, and tariffs) than by a genuine surge in overall demand.
Conclusion: Nucor is strategically raising prices to protect its margins against rising input costs. While successful for now, the sustainability of the $960+ level depends entirely on whether the U.S. economy can generate more diversified demand beyond just tech infrastructure (data centers) in the coming months.
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