How the Russia-Ukraine conflict and the ongoing Middle East crisis - including Houthi Red Sea attacks and the 2026 Strait of Hormuz closure - are reshaping global energy prices, steel supply chains, and what it means for every iron trader in Central India right now.
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📋 Send Enquiry Fill the contact form 💬 Join WhatsApp Channel Get rate updates instantlyTwo overlapping wars are rewriting the rules of global commodity trade. Russia's invasion of Ukraine triggered a 52% surge in crude oil prices in 2022, disrupting energy supply chains globally. Then came the Gaza war, which ignited Houthi attacks on Red Sea shipping - cutting traffic through the Suez Canal by over 65%. Now in 2026, the Strait of Hormuz - through which 20% of the world's oil passes - faces closure, with Brent crude surpassing $100/barrel. For iron and steel traders operating in India's fast-growing construction belt, these are not distant geopolitical events. They are price, availability, and margin events that land directly on the yard and the buyer.
Categorical Breakdown • Product Specificity
The first mistake most buyers and traders make is talking about "steel prices" as if it were a single, unified number. It isn't. The Indian steel market is divided into three distinct product families - each of which responds differently to wars, energy costs, and global trade flows. Understanding this split is the foundation of smart buying and selling.
TMT Fe 415 and Fe 500 bars (sariya) are the backbone of residential, commercial, and infrastructure construction. Prices move in direct response to iron ore costs, energy tariffs at rolling mills, and government infrastructure disbursements. War-driven energy spikes hit this product first and hardest.
MS angles (ISMC / ISA), channels (ISMC 75, 100, 150), and beams (ISMB) are structural steel products used in industrial sheds, warehouses, towers, and bridges. Their pricing tracks TMT bar rates closely since they share the same raw material base - iron ore and coal.
MS pipes (ERW / seamless), GI sheets, MS sheets, and railway rails serve infrastructure, water supply, roofing, and heavy engineering markets. Pipe prices are sensitive to both steel input costs and natural gas (energy) pricing - making them doubly exposed to the current oil and war crisis.
Products such as TMT bars, MS angles, ISMC channels, beams, pipes, sheets, and rails belong to the construction and structural steel category. This makes traders dealing in these products relatively insulated from flat-product import dumping, but directly exposed to domestic energy costs and iron ore pricing - both of which are war-impacted.
The structural insight here is this: stop looking for "the steel price" in a newspaper and start tracking TMT bar ex-Raipur rates, ISMC channel prices, and MS angle rates from Chhattisgarh rolling mills - these are your real benchmarks. Everything else is noise that may or may not signal your segment.
Geopolitical Timeline • Events That Are Reshaping Your Costs
To understand where commodity markets are today, you need to understand the sequence of shocks that brought us here - because each one layered upon the previous, compounding global trade disruption.
Crude oil surged from $76/barrel to over $133/barrel (Brent peak) within weeks. Russia - the world's third-largest oil producer and second-largest natural gas exporter - was sanctioned by the West. Europe lost 160 billion cubic metres of Russian gas supply, triggering a global energy crisis.
Following the Hamas attack on Israel, Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen began attacking commercial vessels in the Red Sea. Over 178 ships were targeted. Major carriers like Maersk rerouted around the Cape of Good Hope, adding 10-14 days and thousands of dollars in freight costs per voyage.
Ship transits through the Suez Canal fell from 2,068 per month to just 877. Oil transit through the Bab al-Mandab Strait dropped from 8.8 million barrels/day to 4 million barrels/day - a cut of 55%. Global freight rates remained significantly elevated throughout 2024-25.
In a dramatic escalation, the United States and Israel launched coordinated strikes on Iranian nuclear and military infrastructure. Iran retaliated with drone and missile attacks on US bases in the Gulf. Saudi Arabia, the UAE, and Kuwait declared emergency protocols for their oil facilities. Gulf countries - which supply over 60% of India's crude oil - went on high alert. The price of Brent crude jumped $14/barrel in 48 hours. LPG and petroleum gas prices in India spiked within weeks as refinery input costs rose sharply.
Following US-Israeli strikes on Iran, Iranian forces declared the Strait of Hormuz "closed" - cutting off 20% of global oil supply. Brent crude crossed $100/barrel for the first time since 2022. India, which depends on Middle Eastern crude for a major share of its imports, is directly in the impact zone. Natural gas prices in Asia surged 54% in a single week. Gulf countries including Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, and Iraq face supply disruption risks. This is the live crisis as of today.
Supply-Side "Cost-Push" Pillars • Raw Materials & Conversion Energy
Here is a truth that many buyers resist: steel price hikes are often not greed - they are math. When the inputs needed to produce one tonne of steel become more expensive, the mill has no option but to pass that cost forward. Wars have directly attacked two of the three main cost pillars of steel production in India.
Steel production in India relies on a chain of inputs. Each link in that chain has been disrupted. Let's trace the war's hand through each pillar:
The primary metallic input for producing TMT bars, angles, channels, beams, pipes, and rails is Iron Ore. Russia and Ukraine together were major global suppliers of iron ore pellets and pig iron. The war eliminated Ukraine as a supplier and redirected Russian supply chains, creating global scarcity premiums that raised the input cost for every tonne of TMT and structural steel rolled in India.
This is where war hurts steel producers hardest. Every tonne of TMT bar, channel, angle, or beam rolled at a mill consumes significant electricity and fuel. Coal-based power costs are directly tied to coking coal prices - and to diesel and fuel oil prices for captive power generators. With the Hormuz Strait disrupted, fuel oil for captive power is now costlier by the day, hitting small and mid-size rolling mills in Chhattisgarh directly.
Refractories (furnace lining materials), rolling mill rolls, and ferroalloys like ferro-manganese are critical inputs in producing TMT bars, angles, channels, and beams. These are sourced from global supply chains. Ocean freight rate spikes from Houthi attacks have dramatically increased the landed cost of these consumables - adding ₹500-₹1,500/tonne to the production cost of every structural steel product rolled in India.
For any TMT or iron trader, this is a critical narrative shift. When a mill revises upward, the right question is not "why are they increasing?" but "which cost pillar has moved?" If iron ore lump prices at NMDC have jumped, or if coking coal futures are surging on Newcastle benchmarks, a price hike is inevitable and likely permanent for that cycle. Waiting it out may cost more than buying now.
Track NMDC's iron ore lump price notifications and monitor the coking coal spot price on Australian Newcastle benchmarks. These two indicators alone will give you a 3-4 week lead time on mill price revisions in Chhattisgarh and Odisha.
Demand-Side Cycles & Sentiment • Restocking Panic, Disruptions, Trader Behavior
Wars do not only increase costs of production. They also trigger a powerful psychological force in commodity markets: the restocking cycle driven by fear. This cycle, paradoxically, often causes the very price spike that buyers were afraid of in the first place.
When news breaks of Houthi attacks or Hormuz closure, buyers in India - especially dealers and project contractors - rush to book steel. "Prices will be higher next month," they reason. So they buy ahead of need. This sudden buying surge creates real, physical demand on mills that haven't increased production. Mills, facing full order books, raise prices. The buyers' fear was correct - but their buying caused it.
This is called a demand pull on top of a cost push - and it creates the most volatile, fast-moving price environment in the steel market.
When logistics are disrupted - say, when freight rates double due to Red Sea rerouting - steel from global mills (Japan, Korea, China) cannot reach India as cheaply. This protects domestic mills from import competition temporarily, allowing them to command a scarcity premium of ₹1,500-₹3,000/tonne above replacement cost. This window closes the moment trade normalises.
For a well-capitalized trader, this window is a buying opportunity at the start and a selling opportunity at the peak. Timing this requires watching global freight rates, not just domestic mills.
India's domestic steel demand is projected to grow 8-10% in FY26, one of the strongest demand environments globally. With the government's infrastructure pipeline at ₹1.4 trillion and per-capita steel consumption rising toward 100 kg, the underlying demand is real and structural - not a bubble. This structural demand, layered on top of war-induced supply disruption, creates the conditions for sustained, not temporary, elevated prices.
China's Influence + Exchange Rate + Ocean Freight + Trade Duties
No analysis of Indian steel prices is complete without confronting the single biggest external variable: China's steel industry. As the world's largest producer and consumer, China acts as both a price-setter and a market disruptor for the entire world.
When China's real estate sector collapsed in 2023-24 and domestic steel demand fell, Chinese mills - running at overcapacity - began exporting aggressively. India's finished steel imports surged to nearly 10 million tonnes in FY25, making India a net importer for the second consecutive year. Cheaper Chinese structural steel, TMT-equivalent bars, pipes, and sections entered Indian ports at prices significantly below domestic mill levels, putting pressure on local pricing.
The Indian government responded with a 12% provisional safeguard duty in April 2025, later extended to a three-year tapered structure. This is a direct acknowledgement that Chinese competition - amplified by wars that have diverted global steel flows toward India - was causing serious injury to domestic producers.
The war compounds the China factor. US tariffs of 25% on steel made American markets even more hostile to Chinese exports, further increasing the volume of Chinese steel hunting for markets - and India, with its booming demand and relatively open market, became a prime target.
For TMT bar, angle, channel, beam, pipe, and rail traders - the Chinese competition is most felt in pricing pressure during periods of low domestic demand. When Chinese structural sections and pipes undercut local mills, buyers delay purchases, building up unsold inventory at local trading yards. This is a war-amplified cycle: the same ships diverted from Western markets redirect to India.
Beyond safeguard duties, India has imposed anti-dumping and countervailing measures on several categories of imported steel products from China and neighbouring countries. These are structural trade policy moves - not short-term reactions - signalling that the government recognises the war-amplified dumping threat as a medium-term structural problem affecting the entire domestic steel value chain.
The INR/USD exchange rate is another war-linked variable. A weaker rupee - which tends to depreciate during global risk-off episodes like the current Hormuz crisis - increases the import parity cost of steel, providing a natural floor for domestic prices. Watch the USD/INR rate as a leading indicator for import-competitive pricing across TMT bars, structural sections, pipes, and sheets.
Gulf Countries, Petroleum Gas, Crude Oil & the Direct India Connection
Of all the geopolitical flashpoints affecting commodity markets today, the US-Israel-Iran conflict is the most directly dangerous for India's steel industry - because it sits at the throat of India's energy supply.
Iran controls the northern shore of the Strait of Hormuz - the chokepoint through which flows roughly 20% of the world's oil and 25% of its LNG. Saudi Arabia, UAE, Kuwait, Iraq, and Qatar must pass their oil through this strait. If Iran closes or mines it, the impact is not theoretical. It lands on India's refinery gate prices within days.
The result: insurance premiums on tankers through the Gulf jumped sharply, many insurers refused coverage entirely, and several tanker operators suspended Gulf routes temporarily.
India sources over 60% of its crude oil from Gulf Cooperation Council countries - primarily Saudi Arabia, UAE, Iraq, and Kuwait. When these nations go on war-footing, three things happen simultaneously: supply volumes tighten, insurance and freight costs explode, and the Indian rupee weakens as global risk-off selling hits emerging markets. All three make steel production in India more expensive.
Petroleum gas used in steel rolling mills and forging units is also imported significantly from Gulf suppliers. In March 2026, LPG import prices to India have risen significantly versus January 2025, directly pressuring small re-rolling mills that cannot absorb the cost without a price revision.
US-Israel strikes Iran → Hormuz threatened → Gulf oil supply disrupted → Indian crude import costs rise → Diesel, LPG, fuel oil costlier → Captive power at Chhattisgarh mini-mills costlier → Every tonne of TMT sariya costs more to produce → Mill price revision → Trader buying cost rises.
For India's steel traders, the US-Iran dimension is also a diplomatic wildcard. If sanctions tighten and India is forced to reduce Russian oil purchases, the cushion that has kept Indian steel production costs lower than Europe's will weaken. The full global oil price would flow into every mill's cost sheet.
Bullish & Bearish Signal Checklist • When to Buy, When to Hold
The following signals should be part of your weekly market review. This is a practical decision-making framework built specifically for the iron and steel trading context.
As of this writing, multiple bullish signals are active simultaneously: elevated oil, elevated freight, INR under pressure, and infrastructure demand support. This is a cost-push + demand-pull + trade disruption triple overlay.
How Internal & External Forces Connect to Market Price
| Layer | Content Type | Key War-Linked Variable | Impact on Trader |
|---|---|---|---|
| Foundation | Product Definition | None (structural) | Know your product - TMT bars, angles, channels, beams, pipes, sheets and rails each have slightly different price drivers |
| Cost Floor | Raw Materials & Power | Coking coal, energy prices linked to Hormuz/oil | Mill price hikes follow energy spikes by 4-8 weeks; anticipate, don't react |
| Market Forces | Demand & China | China dumping amplified by war diversion | Safeguard duties protect your segment's pricing floor - track duty status |
| Friction Factors | Freight & Sentiment | Red Sea, Hormuz - direct freight cost input | Freight spikes = import premium = domestic price support. Normalisation = risk |
| Utility | Checklist & Signals | All of the above synthesized weekly | Consistent monitoring converts geopolitical noise into buying/selling decisions |
FAQ • Translated from the Complexity Above
Vishwageeta Ispat is an iron and steel business based in Raipur, Chhattisgarh. This article is published for educational and informational purposes to help buyers, contractors, and project teams understand the market forces currently influencing steel prices in India.
For current pricing on TMT bars, MS angles, ISMC channels, beams, MS pipes, sheets, rails, and other structural steel products - or to discuss procurement queries - use the links below.