U.S. crude steel production indicators released today showed a year-to-date increase versus the same period in 2024. From the start of 2025 through August 30, adjusted crude steel output totaled 59.469 million net tons, up 1.4% year on year. The industry’s capacity utilization rate averaged 76.7%, slightly above last year’s 76.4%. Regional weekly production was reported at 127,000 net tons in the Northeast, 545,000 in the Great Lakes, 237,000 in the Midwest, 787,000 in the South, and 73,000 in the West. The figures indicate stable operating conditions despite demand variability across construction and manufacturing end-markets. No extraordinary outages or logistics bottlenecks were highlighted in the weekly update. The data provide context for mill lead times and pricing discussions in flat and long products as September buying programs get underway. Analysts often use capacity utilization around the mid-70s as a rough gauge of balanced conditions; today’s reading sits close to that threshold. The report did not include price guidance, but supports views of steady supply availability heading into the autumn maintenance window. Market participants will watch upcoming macro data and tariff developments for potential impacts on orders and run-rates.