Brazil imported 139,753 tons of flat-rolled alloy steel products from South Korea in 2025 — up 242% from the multi-year average. A z-score of 12.2 makes
Brazil imported 139,753 tons of flat-rolled products of other alloy steel (HS chapter 7225) from South Korea in 2025 — a 241.9% jump above the multi-year historical average of 40,880 tons.
The z-score of 12.2 classifies this as an extreme anomaly within Brazil's steel import universe. Most market moves that analysts consider noteworthy register below a z-score of 3. A reading above 10 signals something genuinely out of the ordinary.
The product
HS 7225 covers flat-rolled products of other alloy steels — a category that includes specialty steels used in automotive manufacturing, shipbuilding, capital goods and high-specification construction. The minimum 600mm width indicates industrial-grade material, not consumer-market product.
Unlike standard carbon steel, South Korea's alloy flat products typically carry significant technological content. POSCO and Hyundai Steel produce technical grades that few global competitors can replicate at the same consistency and scale.
Why South Korea?
Brazil sources steel from multiple origins — China, the United States, Japan — but South Korea occupies a specific niche: specialty steels for high-technical-specification applications. CIF cost tends to run above Chinese steel, but the technical specification and delivery reliability justify the premium for automakers and heavy equipment manufacturers based in Brazil.
In 2025, two factors converged to expand imports: the recovery of Brazil's industrial production — particularly in automotive and agricultural machinery — and the competitiveness of the Korean won against the real. With exchange rates favoring Brazilian importers, larger contracts were signed.
Global context: Korean overcapacity
South Korea's steel industry faced mounting pressure in 2024 and 2025 as domestic demand slowed and traditional export markets tightened. The response was an intensified export push, with competitive pricing and aggressive payment terms.
Brazil's steel safeguards, more focused on Chinese flat carbon steel, left specialty Korean products relatively unrestricted. The result was a concentration of purchases that pushed volumes to historically unusual levels.
Concentration risk
Importing 139,753 tons from a single country — when the average was 40,880 — creates corridor dependency. If South Korea restricts exports (for example, under US pressure in the context of steel transhipment or due to a domestic demand surge), Brazilian industrial sectors relying on these specialty grades would face a supply bottleneck.
Supplier diversification is standard practice for large buyers, but specialty steels have a limited pool of qualified suppliers. Not every competitor delivers the same technical specification.
What to watch
2026 data for this corridor is still accumulating. If the import pace holds, Brazil is on track for another record year. If volumes normalize, 2025 will stand as the peak exposure point for Brazilian industry's dependence on Korean specialty steel.
Track monthly updates for this corridor on Kyrodata's SH4 7225 page.
Paraguay controls 99% of Brazil's electricity import supply
Concentration Risk
Brazil sugar to Sri Lanka jumps tenfold as India steps back
Agribusiness
Brazil's potato flake imports from Netherlands surge 400-fold
Agribusiness
Netherlands absorbs 99.3% of Brazil's floating platform exports
Aerospace & marine
Brazilian vegetable oils to Italy surge roughly 3,000-fold
Agribusiness