Stock Markets April 17, 2026 08:24 AM

Higher EU Steel Spreads Lift Near-Term Prospects but Profit Recognition Lags Persist

Barclays flags Q1 pricing gains and company-specific outlooks as safeguards and import pressure shape the European steel picture

By Marcus Reed
Higher EU Steel Spreads Lift Near-Term Prospects but Profit Recognition Lags Persist

EU carbon steel spreads climbed significantly through the first quarter, but Barclays Research warns contract timing means most of the pricing upside will only hit company profit-and-loss statements in Q2. Analysts also revised earnings forecasts and price targets across a range of steelmakers, while import dynamics and the gradual replacement of EU safeguard measures add uncertainty to demand and margin sustainability.

Key Points

  • EU hot-rolled coil spreads have risen since late 2025, while EU CR304 stainless spreads have remained between c1,000 and c1,800 per tonne.
  • Barclays expects ArcelorMittal Q1 adjusted EBITDA of $1.71 billion, Voestalpine Q4 EBITDA of c425 million, and trims select full-year estimates across firms.
  • Import pressure from India and the phased replacement of EU safeguard measures - combined with contract timing lags - are central factors for near-term earnings recognition and margins.

European carbon steel spreads have moved noticeably higher during the first quarter, yet analysts at Barclays Research emphasize that contractual timing will delay the bulk of those gains from appearing on corporate income statements until the second quarter.

Barclays' calculations show EU hot-rolled coil spreads - measured net of iron ore, coking coal, scrap, energy and carbon costs - have been on an upward trajectory since late 2025. Over the same period, EU CR304 stainless spreads have been relatively rangebound, trading between c1,000 and c1,800 per tonne based on Barclays' data.

The brokerage offered earnings and valuation updates for a set of major European steel and stainless producers, detailing expected quarterly results, adjustments to full-year outlooks and the rationale behind rating changes.


ArcelorMittal is assigned an "equal weight" rating with a price target of c45. Barclays projects Q1 adjusted EBITDA of $1.71 billion for the company, which is 4% above the Bloomberg consensus estimate of $1.65 billion. The firm attributes the outperformance to a recovery in NAFTA volumes - including the reversal of Mexico outages contributing roughly $65 million - firmer domestic pricing in Canada and favourable price-cost dynamics in Europe. Barclays forecasts Europe EBITDA for ArcelorMittal at c640 million for Q1, a 73% increase year-on-year, but cuts its full-year 2026 Europe EBITDA estimate by 5% to c3.25 billion.

Voestalpine, Barclays' preferred European name with an "overweight" rating and a c50 price target, is expected to post Q4 EBITDA of c425 million - a sequential increase of 35%. The brokerage places full-year 2026 EBITDA for Voestalpine at c1.46 billion. Barclays cautions the FY27 consensus of about c1.78 billion faces downside risk and flags that management may present a guidance range of c1.6-1.8 billion when it delivers its FY26/27 outlook on June 3.

Thyssenkrupp was downgraded to an "underweight" stance with a trimmed price target of c9, down from c9.50, after Barclays reduced its FY26 adjusted EBIT estimate by 2% to c860 million. The cut reflects softer demand assumptions. Q1 EBIT for Thyssenkrupp is estimated at c174 million, which benefits from approximately c125 million in electricity price compensation within Steel Europe.

Among stainless steel makers, Acerinox carries an "overweight" rating and a c14 price target, with Barclays forecasting Q1 EBITDA of c113 million - up 12% from the prior quarter. Nonetheless, Barclays trims Acerinox's FY26 EBITDA estimate by 5% to c600 million, citing higher European cost assumptions. Aperam and Outokumpu are both rated "underweight" at price targets of c30 and c4 respectively, with FY26 EBITDA estimates reduced by 5% for Aperam and 2% for Outokumpu.


Barclays also highlights policy and trade dynamics that could affect margins and volumes. Despite the introduction of the Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism, India filled its Q2 hot-rolled coil import quotas almost immediately, a development Barclays sees as evidence of ongoing import pressure in Europe. The analysts express caution about whether demand will be strong enough to absorb higher steel prices and spreads and whether there will be substitution toward indirect imports.

EU safeguard measures have been confirmed for replacement starting in July 2026, but Barclays warns that it will take time to work through inventories and for stronger pricing to flow through to company P&Ls. The brokerage identifies potential demand destruction stemming from Middle East risks as the key downside risk for carbon steel.

Overall, Barclays' note paints a picture of improving spreads and selective company-level strength, tempered by timing mismatches in contract recognition, import competition and macro-regional risks that could blunt the sustainability of margin improvements.

Risks

  • Contract timing means most first-quarter pricing gains will be recognized in Q2, delaying the benefit to company P&Ls - this affects corporate earnings reporting across steelmakers.
  • Continued import pressure, exemplified by India filling Q2 hot-rolled coil quotas almost immediately, could limit pricing power and margins in the EU steel market - a risk for producers and downstream manufacturing sectors.
  • Demand destruction related to heightened Middle East risks could weaken carbon steel volumes and undermine spread sustainability - potentially impacting broader industrial and construction end markets.

More from Stock Markets

MakeMyTrip Leads India Push as Global OTAs Race to Embed Agentic AI Apr 17, 2026 KeyBanc Survey Identifies Leaders in Media and Broadband as Consumer Preferences Shift Apr 17, 2026 Strategy Shares Surge as Bitcoin Rally and Speculative Momentum Lift Market Apr 17, 2026 Xanadu Founder Reaches Billionaire Status After Stock Rockets Nearly Fivefold Apr 17, 2026 U.S. energy shares slump as Iran says Strait of Hormuz fully reopened, Brent falls under $90 Apr 17, 2026