Germany jumped from 35th to #1 in Brazilian cold-rolled steel exports through April 2026, seizing 25.3% of shipments — up from near zero a year ago.
One year, one country, one improbable leap. In the first four months of 2026, Germany shot from #35 to the top of Brazil's export rankings for cold-rolled flat steel — a category where it barely registered a year ago.
The numbers are stark. Through April 2026, Germany imported US$ 27.2 million worth of Brazilian cold-rolled coil, commanding a 25.3% share of the total. In the same four-month window of 2025, Germany's purchases amounted to US$ 143. That's not a typo. The variation is roughly 190,000 times over.
Concentration at this level — one buyer taking a full quarter of a product category — is unusual in flat steel markets. Cold-rolled coil typically distributes across a dozen or more destinations. Germany's automotive and capital-goods industry swallowing that share in a single YTD window suggests either a structured medium-term supply agreement or a major spot procurement cycle by a large industrial buyer.
No other destination comes close to that share in the same period. The ranking reshuffled entirely around Germany's entry.
Two forces converged. The Brazilian real weakened against the euro through Q1 2026, lowering the effective cost of Brazilian steel for European buyers and making it competitive against Asian suppliers on a delivered-cost basis. At the same time, several large German flat-steel plants announced capacity cuts in 2025, leaving industrial buyers looking for alternative sources.
Critically, Brazil does not face active EU anti-dumping measures on cold-rolled flat steel — unlike hot-rolled products, where EU safeguards remain in force. That tariff window made the Brazilian supply route commercially viable at scale.
A 25% share in one market creates real exposure. If German industrial demand softens in H2 — from automotive production slowdowns, supply-chain policy shifts, or a recovery of domestic European capacity — Brazil loses its single largest buyer in this category with no immediate substitute at equivalent scale.
The pandemic made this vulnerability legible for Brazilian steel exporters who had concentrated 40%+ of a category in a single partner. Building pipeline into alternative European markets — Poland, the Netherlands, Belgium — while the German channel is open is the standard defensive move. The window for that diversification is now, not after the first sign of a volume pullback.
The Q2 2026 figures will tell whether this is a structural shift or a one-time inventory restocking cycle. If Germany sustains purchases at this pace, the concentration becomes a trend worth actively managing. If it pulls back, the Q1 spike was a tactical buy, not a durable sourcing relationship.
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