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Recycling Today
March 23, 2006
The Price is Wrong
That's the complaint often heard regarding published scrap prices. Is the new RMDAS methodology an improvement?
By Brian Taylor (Brian is the editor of Recycling Today and can be contacted at btaylor@gie.net)

Establishing average pricing for recent scrap metal transactions is an often thankless task that has traditionally been tackled by trade publications such as American Metal Market, New York, and other publications covering the metals industry.

The averages and price lists presented by these publications have been widely used for decades (and, in fact, two such price averages are presented in chart format in this publication), but that does not mean that relationships between those in the steel and recycling industries and these publications are always harmonious.

Traders, ferrous scrap generators and steel mill buyers are at times suspicious as to the accuracy of the prices, either fearing that the publications are not collecting enough information or, even more worrisome, are being misled by providers of information with a stake in the market.

The unhappiness with price surveys and retroactive published "price corrections", and the notion that there must be more costeffective, accurate ways to gather information and make analyses available to the industry has become an opportunity that Management Science Associates, Inc. (MSA), Pittsburgh, has pursued with vigor.

PROOF OF PURCHASE. MSA, incorporated in 1963, one of the world's largest data analysis and information science companies, has for many years collected, interpreted and provided timely, reliable information to several business sectors in the United States, including cigarettes, other segments of the tobacco industry, magazines, cable television networks, and segments of the confections industry.

For a company to establish its presence and credibility in such markets, an important requirement has always been to have access to sales information.MSA's establishment of the Raw Material Data Aggregation Service (RMDAS) for steelmakers meets that requirement. MSA is working with a growing number of steel producers, including both electric furnace and integrated steelmakers, and is obtaining their transaction-specific information on their ferrous scrap purchases.

According to Patrick J. Gallagher, vice president of the Metals and Advanced Manufacturing Division of MSA, participants certify that their information is complete, accurate and verifiable. MSA engages in statistical verification procedures to assure accuracy and to help RMDAS participants that may at times have difficulty with their internal systems.

Furthermore, public companies would risk running afoul of Sarbanes-Oxley requirements if they were to file false information. Complaints have been filed against firms in other industries who have been charged with providing false data in an attempt to manipulate indices and stock prices. "Data are transmitted electronically to MSA and are tied to the clients' purchasing and accounting systems," notes Gallagher. "If the data comes from their accounting systems, the penalties of playing games with the information could be great because of Sarbanes-Oxley."

Such auditable reporting requirements help establish the accuracy of the information. Additionally, a growing percentage of total ferrous scrap purchased tonnage represented by steel mills that are participating in RMDAS helps ensure that the averages that are developed have the volume behind them to be legitimate.

The RMDAS effort started by MSA in 2003 had the participation of several mills that, combined, accounted for about one-third of the ferrous scrap purchases for steel making. That has grown, according to Dr. Alfred A. Kuehn, founder and CEO of MSA, so that at the beginning of this year the combined ferrous scrap purchases for mills participating in RMDAS accounted for more than 75% of the scrap consumed by steel mills in the United States (17 firms provide scrap purchase data for 65 mills, according to MSA). In the near future, five additional mills may be added as MSA is helping 3 steel firms prepare their data from those mills for inclusion in RMDAS and its price indices.

To a statistician such as Dr. Kuehn, there are significant differences between the above MSA methodology and telephone surveys that, he says "...are far from transparent and comprehensive, and may not ask about actual scrap prices. Use of census techniques provides verifiable data that are more informative than responses obtained by a magazine asking, 'How do you feel?' about the direction of prices in the market."

Virtually all other "industry services" that MSA has developed achieved participation representing 90% - 99.7% coverage of those industries in a 5-year period, and Dr. Kuehn says, "It is reasonable for that to also occur with Steel RMDAS and Paper RMDAS, the latter being a new similar service under development for paper recycling. The timeliness, accuracy, detail, and comprehensive data that RMDAS provides for decision-making, coupled with MSA security, anti-trust compliance and reduced communications and computer costs, provide assurance that all firms will want to have the benefits of such a system. All non-participants will be at a disadvantage relative to their competitors."

MUTUAL INTEREST? The RMDAS product, as it has been developed and marketed to date, was created to serve the steel industry and be able to publish a representative and accurate ferrous scrap price index. So should scrap processors be suspicious of there being a pro-scrap buyer bias in the numbers?

The MSA leadership team says that scrap companies that have looked at the RMDAS methodology have a difficult time finding fault with it. MSA has, and continues to learn, from scrap dealers and some of them see how a transparent market can benefit them, says MSA. Several scrap dealers are exploring how to become RMDAS participants, which would provide not only increased "coverage" of the market but another opportunity for MSA to verify the accuracy of some of the data provided to it by participating steel firms.

"People want more reliable and accurate information, because it makes markets more efficient," says Ralph L. Pinkert, MSA Business Development Director. "Price transparency brings more stability and rationality to the market, yet reflects genuine volatility caused by supply and demand changes. Reporting based on aggregated volume and price data will provide both scrap buyers and sellers a reasonable barometer of what has occurred."

Adds Pinkert, "Historically, scrap companies have been able to make money off obsolete scrap by adjusting scale prices and turning the spigot on and off. But it is in serving industrial accounts, which continuously generates new production scrap that is usually bought on a pricing formula basis pegged off of an index, where an inaccurate 30-day price can be costly. If that price is not representative of the true market price that month, scrap companies can lose money."

Dr. Kuehn, a veteran of establishing networks of sales information systems involving participation by competitors and adversaries, is optimistic that distrust in the market can be overcome by use of its system. "In all past industry services developed by MSA, some companies say, 'We'll be honest, but we have doubts about our competitors,'" he notes.

Having doubters in the market is not a new challenge for MSA, says Dr. Kuehn. "In the tobacco industry, a holdout company was convinced its own information was the best, but at the end of 1974 the Federal Trade Commission provided aggregate data that proved MSA was right on target," he recalls. All of those firms have continued to participate for the past 35 years, and all CableTV networks (now 71) have participated for 19 years.

A good test for the RMDAS ferrous scrap pricing number occurred in the first half of 2005, according to Dr. Kuehn. "RMDAS showed the market going down while published prices in magazines were going up. We were put into a defensive position and asked to justify our technology," he comments.

But according to Dr. Kuehn, in mid-July, one of those publishers said the prices it had reported should be adjusted downward retroactively by $60 to $80/ton. Such corrections have also been made in the past. Dr. Kuehn said, "Confidence in MSA's systems and its methodology was vindicated. Economists can seldom identify turning points as quickly as RMDAS had done, so RMDAS gained great credibility last summer."

DATA MINING. MSA did not establish RMDAS simply to prove it can produce and provide timely, accurate databases and the price indices that have supplemented its web-site reports since November, the company's leaders are quick to point out.

Several new ways were identified by users of the system to have this information help steelmakers judge purchasing performance, control costs, mine the data for other helpful information, and develop sound ongoing relationships with their suppliers and customers.

A number of ways in which careful looks at transactions, or series of transactions, can reveal valuable insights affecting scrap-purchasing decisions have been proven to be of such value that MSA has pre-programmed them so they are easily available for use by subscribers. Another benefit of RMDAS market data is it reduces the cost of preparation for audits and Sarbanes-Oxley compliance with "Alerts" & "Management Discussion and Analysis" requirements in quarterly and annual financial reports.

Gallagher notes the accuracy and detailed information maintained by RMDAS led to separating shredded scrap into two categories, based on whether the shredded scrap has 0.17 or less percent copper, defined as low residual copper "#1 Shredded", typically priced at a premium, or "# 2 Shredded", which contains a higher level of copper. "Those more detailed performance levels for customers on the buy side are equally valuable for scrap sellers," remarks Gallagher.

The above capability is also valuable for paper recycling according to European Paper Recycling Conference attendees, who last October saw that RMDAS detailed transaction data could incorporate estimated values for ash and moisture. The "quality" of recycled paper is declining, so ash and moisture measures can help establish the premium value of high quality recycled paper, and the price differential that should command. There is high interest in MSA extending Steel and Paper RMDAS to Europe as well as to Asia.

For Dr. Kuehn, pursuit of such detail and accurate knowledge is a passion. He says, "We are working toward using real-time census data rather than a convenience survey."

© 2006 Raw Material Data Aggregation Service (RMDAS)™ is a trademark of Management Science Associates, Inc.
 

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