Steel prices in the North
According to SteelOnline.vn, Hoa Phat steel brand, with CB240 rolled steel line at 13,480 VND/kg; D10 CB300 ribbed steel bar is priced at 13,580 VND/kg.
Viet Y steel brand, CB240 rolled steel line is priced at 13,580 VND/kg; D10 CB300 ribbed steel bar is priced at 13,690 VND/kg.
Viet Duc Steel, with CB240 coil steel line at 13,430 VND/kg, D10 CB300 ribbed steel bar is priced at 13,740 VND/kg.
Viet Sing Steel, with CB240 coil steel, is priced at VND13,430/kg; D10 CB300 ribbed steel is priced at VND13,640/kg.
VAS steel, with CB240 coil steel line at 13,330 VND/kg; D10 CB300 ribbed steel bar is priced at 13,380 VND/kg.
Steel prices in the Central region
Hoa Phat Steel, with CB240 coil steel line, is at 13,530 VND/kg; D10 CB300 ribbed steel bar is priced at 13,640 VND/kg.
Viet Duc Steel, currently CB240 coil steel is at 13,840 VND/kg; D10 CB300 ribbed steel is priced at 14,140 VND/kg.
VAS steel, CB240 coil steel line is at 13,740 VND/kg; D10 CB300 ribbed steel bar is priced at 13,790 VND/kg.
Steel prices in the South
Hoa Phat Steel, CB240 rolled steel, at 13,690 VND/kg; D10 CB300 ribbed steel is priced at 13,840 VND/kg.
VAS steel, CB240 coil steel line is at 13,380 VND/kg; D10 CB300 ribbed steel bar is priced at 13,480 VND/kg.
Steel prices on the exchange
Rebar on the Shanghai Futures Exchange (SHFE) for October 2025 delivery rose 14 yuan to 3,261 yuan/t.
Iron ore futures fell and were headed for a weekly loss on growing concerns about the demand outlook in top consumer China amid an escalating global trade war.
The most-traded May iron ore contract on China’s Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) fell 0.33% to 757.5 yuan ($104.52) a tonne, posting a weekly decline of 3.8%.
The contract hit its lowest since January 10 at 753.5 yuan a tonne in early trading.
Benchmark iron ore for April delivery on the Singapore Exchange fell 0.85% to $99.65 a tonne, after hitting its lowest since March 11 at $99.05 a tonne earlier. Prices have fallen 4.2% this week.
At its annual parliamentary meeting earlier this month, China said it would restructure its giant steel industry through production cuts, without giving details.
But clear signs of increased demand in the near term limited losses on Friday.
Average daily hot metal output, often used to gauge iron ore demand, rose 2.5% from the previous week to its highest since Aug. 2, 2024, at 2.36 million tonnes as of March 20, according to a survey by consultancy Mysteel.
Other steelmaking components on the DCE fell, with coking coal losing 1.8% and 1.76% respectively.
Steel benchmarks on the Shanghai Futures Exchange traded in a narrow range. Hot-rolled rebar and coil were little changed, wire rod fell 0.38% and stainless steel lost 0.6%.
Source: https://kinhtedothi.vn/gia-thep-hom-nay-22-3-bien-dong-trong-pham-vi-hep.html
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