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Updated Jun 17, 2026 · 13:36
Business India News Updated Jun 17, 2026

India's Steel Capacity Utilisation to Stay Above 90% on Strong Demand: Kotak

India's steel demand grew 9% year-on-year in May 2026, keeping industry capacity utilisation above 90% in the medium term, according to a Kotak Institutional Equities report. Exports rose 30% YoY but were outpaced by imports of 0.7 million tons. Primary rebar prices fell 11% from their April peak, while hot-rolled coil prices remained relatively stable. Margins are expected to improve quarter-on-quarter as higher trade prices from Q4FY26 get reflected in Q1FY27E.

India's steel capacity utilisation to stay above 90% on strong demand: Kotak

New Delhi, June 17

As India's steel demand remained robust in May, surging nearly 9 per cent on YoY, industry capacity utilisation is expected to stay above 90 per cent in the medium term, as per a report by Kotak Institutional Equities.

Domestic steel demand grew 9 per cent year-on-year in May 2026 and 8.7 per cent in FY26-to-date, following 7.6 per cent growth in FY26 after four consecutive years of double-digit expansion. It further noted "exports increased 30 per cent YoY, on a weak base, to 0.5 million tons, but were outpaced by imports of 0.7 million tons in May 2026."

According to the report, primary rebar prices have fallen by around Rs 7,000 per tonne, or 11 per cent, from their April 2026 peak. Meanwhile, domestic hot-rolled coil (HRC) prices have remained relatively stable, declining by only Rs 1,600 per tonne, or 2-3 per cent, amid seasonal weakness in the steel sector.

Additionally, HRC prices are still trading at a 7 per cent discount to China's import parity levels, limiting the risk of further declines. "Weak steel spreads in China due to cost inflation improve odds of higher regional prices going ahead," it added.

The report noted that spot hard coking coal prices are 4 per cent higher than fourth-quarter FY26 levels, while global iron ore prices have largely remained range-bound. Additionally, the NMDC iron ore fines prices have increased by about 20 per cent as against March 2026 exit on higher domestic steel prices in 4QFY26.

"We expect industry utilization to remain above 90% in the medium term, led by a robust demand CAGR of ~7% over FY2026-29E, outperforming capacity additions," it said.

Furthermore, margins will likely improve on QoQ as a "portion of the sharp 14%/21% increase in trade prices in 4QFY26 gets reflected in 1QFY27E. This should more than offset the increase in coal and ore prices, leading to higher qoq margins for our ferrous coverage," the report added.

— ANI

Reader Comments

Priya S

This is excellent for our manufacturing sector! 🇮🇳 With 90% capacity utilisation, we are clearly on the right track. The 30% export jump is promising. Let's hope we can outpace imports soon.

Vikram M

While the demand story is solid, I'm concerned about the rise in coking coal and iron ore prices. Input costs going up by 4-20% could squeeze margins despite the strong demand. Kotak's optimism about QoQ margin improvement needs close watching.

James A

Strong fundamentals for Indian steel. The 7% CAGR over FY2026-29 is impressive. With China's steel spreads weakening, this is India's time to shine in the global market. Just need to ensure quality and cost competitiveness.

Michael C

9% demand growth is solid, but imports still exceeding exports is a concern. We need more policy support for domestic producers. The 7% discount to China's import parity is good, but we must protect against dumping.

Sarah B

Good to see the steel industry humming along! The infrastructure push is clearly working. But I agree with others - input costs and import competition need attention. Hope the government keeps up the supportive policies.

Ananya R

Finally some good news for the economy! The 90%+

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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