Saudi steel prices rise 12% in Q1, cement edges up

05/06/2018 Argaam Special

 

Steel prices in Saudi Arabia have jumped 12 percent year-on-year (YoY) to average SAR 2,552 per ton in Q1 2018, data issued by the Kingdom’s General Authority for Statistics (GASTAT) showed.

 

Prices of cement and cables increased 1 percent YoY each to SAR 13.04 per 50-kilogram bag, with cables rising 19 percent YoY to SAR 31.73 per meter.

 

Wood grew by 5 percent YoY in the same period.  

 

Meanwhile, prices of ready-mix concrete dropped 5 percent YoY in the same period.

  

Average Prices of Construction Materials (SAR)

Material

Q1 2017

Q1 2018

Variation

Ready-mix concrete

(cubic meter)

185.63

176.62

(5%)

Steel (ton)

2,287.00

2,552.00

+12%

Cement

(50 kilo bag)

12.95

13.04

+1%

Cables (meter)

26.75

31.73

+19%

Wood

(cubic meter)

2,504.20

2,626.28

+5%

 

Steel prices rose the most in March at 13 percent to SAR 2,563 per ton. January saw the least growth at 9 percent YoY to SAR 2,533 per ton.

 

Steel Prices (SAR/ton)

Month

2017

2018

Variation

Jan

2,319

2,533

+9%

Feb

2,283

2,561

+12%

March

2,259

2,563

+13%

Average

2,287

2,552

+12%

 

Cement prices slipped 0.2 percent YoY in February to SAR 12.98 per 50-kilogram bag.

 

Cement prices (SAR/50 Kg bag)

Month

2017

2018

Variation

Jan

12.98

13.12

+1%

Feb

13.01

12.98

(0.2%)

March

12.86

13.01

+1%

Average

12.95

13.04

+1%

 

Construction Materials (SAR)

Month

Ready-mix concrete

(cubic meter)

Cables

(meter)

Wood

          (cubic meter)

Jan

178.25

31.37

2,633.79

Feb

175.35

31.93

2,605.08

March

176.27

31.88

2,639.97

Comments {{getCommentCount()}}

Be the first to comment

{{Comments.indexOf(comment)+1}}
{{comment.FollowersCount}}
{{comment.CommenterComments}}
loader Train
Sorry: the validity period has ended to comment on this news
Opinions expressed in the comments section do not reflect the views of Argaam. Abusive comments of any kind will be removed. Political or religious commentary will not be tolerated.

Most Read