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Home Commodities

Thyssenkrupp Gets a Steel Tariff Lifeline, But Market Mood Remains Tepid

SiterGedge by SiterGedge
July 2, 2026
in Commodities, DAX, Industrial
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The European Union’s revamped steel import regime came into force on July 1, 2026, offering Thyssenkrupp a measure of political backing at a time when the group’s listed shares are struggling to find their footing. Investors have so far greeted the tighter trade restrictions with a shrug, sending the stock down roughly 9 to 11 percent over the past month despite the promise of a more protected home market.

Under the new rules, the duty-free quota for steel entering the EU has been slashed to 18.3 million tonnes — a drop of around 47 percent compared with the previous arrangement. Any imports above that ceiling now face a 50 percent levy, double the earlier rate of 25 percent. The European Parliament approved the overhaul on May 19 with a broad majority, replacing the safeguard measures that expired on June 30.

For Thyssenkrupp’s steel division, which has been squeezed by a flood of cheap products from China, the policy shift represents a tangible reprieve. The EU is now applying a 50 percent punitive tariff on roughly two-thirds of Chinese steel imports, directly targeting the overcapacity that the OECD warns could hit 721 million tonnes globally by 2027. Europe’s steel mills are currently running at just 65 percent utilisation, a level the European Commission has described as unsustainable over the long term.

The industry body Eurofer calculates that the tighter rules should free up an additional 15 million tonnes of capacity utilisation — production that has been idled since 2019. Yet the association’s outlook remains subdued: it forecasts only a 0.4 percent uptick in European steel demand for 2026. The tariffs are seen more as a stabiliser than a growth engine.

Thyssenkrupp shares closed at €10.39 on the first trading day after the new measures took effect, virtually unchanged from the prior session. The stock has shed 6.14 percent in the past week alone. Its relative strength index sits at 44.3–44.9, a neutral zone that suggests the market has yet to fully price in the political support. The equity is trading about 2 percent below its 50-day moving average but remains nearly 4 percent above the 200-day line, reflecting a longer-term recovery from the March trough of €7.10.

Should investors sell immediately? Or is it worth buying Thyssenkrupp?

Year to date, the stock is still nursing a gain of roughly 7.4 to 7.8 percent. From the 52-week high of €13.24 reached last October, however, the gap remains more than 21 percent. The next major catalyst comes on August 13, when Thyssenkrupp publishes its fiscal third-quarter results and investors can gauge whether the tariff shield is already translating into hard numbers.

Outside the trade arena, the EU is also moving to relieve energy costs for industrial heavyweights. A nearly twofold surge in gas prices — fuelled by the Iran crisis over the past three weeks — has prompted Brussels to propose slashing the electricity tax for energy-intensive sectors, potentially to zero for steelmakers. The plan is part of a broader electrification strategy that the Commission aims to finalise before the summer break. A coordinated refill of gas storage is also set to begin in July to safeguard industrial supply.

Demand for high-grade steel remains visible in select corners of the economy. The July 2 opening of Infineon’s new “Smart Power Fab” in Dresden, a €5 billion project completed three months ahead of schedule, consumed an estimated 25,000 tonnes of steel for its cleanroom and structural framework.

Chart watchers see a split personality in the stock’s technical picture. The RSI is neutral, the 50-day average has been breached to the downside, yet the 200-day average still offers support. Political tailwinds from Brussels are colliding with lingering uncertainty about US trade policy. Washington has refused to extend the USMCA pact in its current form, and the next round of talks is set for July 20. Until then, Thyssenkrupp’s shares look set to oscillate between protectionist hope and transatlantic risk.

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SiterGedge

SiterGedge

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