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South Korea Wins Softer EU Steel Quota Carve-Out Days Before July 1 Cutoff, Shielding POSCO and Hyundai Steel

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South Korea Wins Softer EU Steel Quota Carve-Out Days Before July 1 Cutoff, Shielding POSCO and Hyundai Steel

South Korea Wins Softer EU Steel Quota Carve-Out Days Before July 1 Cutoff, Shielding POSCO and Hyundai Steel

Seoul, June 23, 2026 — South Korea has secured a softer-than-expected reduction in its duty-free steel export quota to the European Union ahead of a sweeping regime change that takes effect on July 1, Industry Minister Kim Jung-kwan confirmed on Monday, offering relief to POSCO (005490.KS) and Hyundai Steel (004020.KS) as they navigate tightening global trade conditions.

Under the EU's new Steel Safeguard Regulation, the bloc's total duty-free import ceiling is being slashed by approximately 46%, falling from 33.82 million metric tons to 18.35 million metric tons. Imports exceeding the quota will face a tariff rate that doubles from the current 25% to 50%. The regulation, which replaces expiring safeguard measures, introduces a stricter "melt and pour" origin rule requiring exporters to document where steel was initially smelted—targeting cheap Chinese overproduction routed through intermediate processors.


Korea Lands Bilateral Carve-Out

South Korean officials pushed back hard. Trade Minister Yeo Han-koo traveled to Brussels in early June to lobby European Commission Trade Commissioner Maroš Šefčovič directly. The diplomatic effort appears to have paid off: Industry Minister Kim said Seoul reached "broad agreement" with the EU that Korea's country-specific quota allocation would not face the full 46% reduction applied to the global ceiling.

Kim stopped short of disclosing the precise adjusted figure, signaling that final numbers remain under negotiation. The government plans to announce a comprehensive steel industry support package before the end of June or in early July, alongside the official quota confirmation.

"Korea's allocation would not be reduced by the full 46 percent even if the EU lowers its overall import ceiling," Kim told reporters.


Stakes Are High for POSCO and Hyundai Steel

The EU represents Korea's second-largest steel export destination. In 2025, Korean steelmakers shipped 3.24 million metric tons to European buyers — roughly 11.5% of the country's total 28.25 million metric ton export volume — generating an estimated USD 4.48 billion in revenue. Of that volume, approximately 2.58–2.63 million metric tons moved under the existing duty-free quota, with the remainder subject to global quota allocations.

For POSCO and Hyundai Steel, EU exposure arrives at a difficult moment. Both companies are contending with 3–5% domestic operating profit margins, persistent pricing pressure from subsidized Chinese steel, and elevated capital expenditure commitments for overseas capacity. A sudden doubling of the above-quota tariff — from 25% to 50% — would erode margins on any shipments that spill above the new, lower ceiling.


Long-Term Hedge: Louisiana Mill

Recognizing the structural vulnerability of relying on shrinking quota access, POSCO and Hyundai Steel finalized plans last December to build a 2.7 million metric ton per year flat-steel facility in Ascension Parish, Louisiana, targeting first production by early 2029. POSCO will acquire a 20% equity stake in Hyundai Steel's new US subsidiary, mirroring a broader Korean industrial push to establish tariff-proof US manufacturing footprints. Once operational, the Louisiana mill would provide a direct channel to the US market — Korea's largest trading partner for steel — independently of any quota regime.


What to Watch

The Korean government's late-June or early-July support announcement will be the next major signpost. Industry observers are watching for: (a) the specific percentage reduction Korea ultimately absorbs, (b) whether Seoul secures any partial exemption as an FTA partner with the EU, and (c) how the "melt and pour" documentation requirements interact with Korean integrated steelmakers' supply chains, which blend domestic and imported iron ore inputs but process all steel domestically.

Both POSCO (005490.KS) and Hyundai Steel (004020.KS) shares were broadly flat in early Tuesday trade ahead of the announcement, with investors awaiting the fine print of Korea's quota carve-out before adjusting positions.


Sources: Korea Herald, KED Global, Korean Ministry of Trade Industry and Energy, S&P Global Commodity Insights

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