Monday, December 20, 2004

Holiday Hours for Hamond Industries Ltd

Hamond will be closing for the holidays at the end of the workday Thursday, December 23rd and re-opening on January 3rd, 2005.

If your factory is working during that period and has or may have a requirements for parts, or if you need parts to be at your door on the day you come back, please make arrangements now and we will ship you parts before we close down. In specific cases, we can make arrangements that the trucking company hold the parts for a few days so they are delivered the morning you come back to work.

During the time we are shut down, there will be a working answering machine and working fax machine, so you can contact us by phone, fax or email. However, we won't be able to do anything about it until we get back on January 3rd.

You can contact us in the following ways:
By phone at 905-761-9094
By FAX at 905-761-9097
Our web site: http://www.hamond.com/
By email at orders@hamond.com
You can reach John Sheehy on his phone at 416-998-0212

We wish all our customers and suppliers a happy, healthy and safe holiday season.

Michael Wagner, Owner, Hamond Industries Ltd.



Steel Pricing and the Price of the American Dollar

Over the past 6 months, steel prices have gone through the roof (and steel availability has deteriorated alarmingly, despite the high prices). This has happened everywhere in the world.

The root causes are many, but some of the major ones are shortages in steel raw materials like metalurgical or coaking coal and recycled steel and heavy demand for steel products in China (which is going through a belated industrial revolution).

Here in Canada, the rise in the cost of steel has been (somewhat) offset by recent weakness in the US dollar. Most steel we get here is directly or indirectly priced in US dollars, and since the Canadian dollar was strong against the American, that took some of the sting out of recent prices.

Well, that may all be coming to an end. The rise of the Canadian dollar has abated, at least for the moment. You can check this out for yourself at Yahoo's currency conversion page.

We haven't seen new steel prices in the last week, but I'm bracing myself for sticker shock.

In the longer term, leaving aside currency conversion issues for a second, steel prices (and lead times, and availability issues) are forecast to stay high for the first half of 2005. After that, new mining (iron ore and coke) and production capacity, in North America, in Europe and in China itself is expected to exert itself and increase total global capacity and reduce prices and wait times.

As always, the question is, what can our customers do in the short and medium term to control prices.

The answer is, give us a blanket for about a years worth of parts (or give us authorization to buy steel ahead of parts orders). This allows us to
  1. Buy far enough ahead to secure reliable supply
  2. Buy from the widest selection of suppliers to improve competition and price.
  3. Buy the entire years worth (if it's stainless or galvanized or aluminized steel) or about half a years worth (otherwise). The processing costs can be vastly reduced if our supplier can process a larger quantity of steel. This is almost always cheaper than the bank costs of holding the extra steel.
As always, our salesman John Sheehy stands ready and able to help you with the specifics for your parts.

Michael Wager, Owner, Hamond Industries Ltd


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