US hot-rolled coil index jumps over $1,190/t

Confirmed deals have driven hot-rolled coil prices in the United States over $59.50 per hundredweight ($1,190 per short ton), to an all-time high.

Fastmarkets’ daily steel hot-rolled coil index, fob mill US was calculated at $59.63 per cwt ($1,192.60 per ton) on Thursday February 11, up by 0.98% from $59.05 per cwt the previous day and 0.68% higher than $59.23 per cwt one week ago.

Inputs were received in a range from $58.00-62.50 per cwt, representing confirmed deals, mill offers and general assessments of spot market pricing levels. A transactional input was carried over within the producer sub-index to minimize day-to-day volatility.

Heard in the market
This marks the third time in a week that Fastmarkets’ hot-rolled coil index has set a new all-time high, after climbing to $59.23 per cwt on Thursday February 4 and $59.24 per cwt on Monday February 8, and sources do not expect the flat-rolled steel segment’s historic bull market to retreat any time soon.

Lead times have remained stable and supply continues to be restricted to an unprecedented degree, with activity in the automotive; heating, ventilating and air conditioning (HVAC); and non-residential construction segments still strong.

At the same time, the global shortage of computer chips has yet to dent steel demand from the automotive end market, sources said, while the arrival of imported flat-rolled steel expected in late spring will not be sufficient to ease the current shortfall or pressure domestic prices lower.

Quote of the day
“Supply is flat-out atrocious,” a consumer source said. “Demand is strong, and mills are still running two-plus weeks behind.”

What to read next
Soybean futures on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange held broadly steady in the front end of the curve on Thursday May 29, while contracts for farther delivery months faced some downward pressure.
Fastmarkets published its assessment of the MB-STE-0232 steel scrap No1 busheling, consumer buying price, delivered mill Chicago, $/gross ton on Thursday June 5, 2025.
US and European wheat futures rose on Thursday May 29 amid technical buying while market participants shrugged off projections of robust crops in Russia, India and the EU.
Seaborne iron ore prices are on the rise due to increased trading activity and stable market fundamentals, highlighting steady demand and opportunities for growth while emphasizing the importance of monitoring market trends to manage risks effectively.
The recent doubling of Section 232 tariffs to 50%, announced by President Trump, has introduced significant uncertainty to the US steel market, with traders reporting disruptions to imports, paused domestic mill quotes and concerns over potential price increases amid modest demand. Industry participants are now assessing how the additional costs will be absorbed across the supply chain.
Here are the key takeaways from market participants on US ferrous scrap metal prices, market confidence, inventory and more from our May survey.