皇冠体育app

/ Industries

Iron ore surplus seen shuttering 皇冠体育app mines

By Bloomberg News in Singapore (皇冠体育app Daily) Updated: 2014-05-08 10:44

Iron ore surplus seen shuttering 皇冠体育app mines

Imported iron ore is unloaded from a vessel in Nantong, Jiangsu province. Xu Congjun / For 皇冠体育app Daily

New, cheap supplies from Australia, Brazil pushing global prices down

Surging global supplies of seaborne iron ore will challenge Chinese producers of the raw material for steel, probably forcing some higher-cost capacity in the country to close, according to BHP Billiton Ltd.

The gain in global production is being led by Australia and Brazil and their new, low-cost output will displace marginal suppliers in 皇冠体育app, Michiel Hovers, vice-president of iron ore marketing at BHP, told an industry conference on Wednesday.

Iron ore surplus seen shuttering 皇冠体育app mines
 Rio Tinto to boost iron ore capacity 
Iron ore surplus seen shuttering 皇冠体育app mines
Baosteel, Aurizon bid $1.3b on mine  
Vale SA, the world's biggest iron ore producer, plans to raise output by almost 50 percent by 2018, Clo Alves, global director of marketing and sales, told the gathering in Singapore.

The biggest producers, including Vale, BHP, Rio Tinto Group and Fortescue Metals Group Ltd, have invested billions of dollars to expand output, betting on sustained growth in demand from 皇冠体育app, the biggest buyer. Iron ore fell into a bear market in March amid forecasts for a global glut.

Fortescue wouldn't cut output even if prices extend declines as its costs are low, Zhuang Binjun, business development manager, said.

"Seaborne supply growth will come largely from Australia and Brazil," said Hovers. "This new supply will be low-cost seaborne and displace marginal supply from high-cost domestic Chinese producers and other lower-quality iron ore imports into 皇冠体育app."

Slumping prices

Ore with 62 percent content delivered to has fallen 21 percent so far this year to $106 a ton as of Tuesday, according to data from The Steel Index Ltd. The benchmark fell to $104.70 on March 10, the lowest level since 2012. While prices may be firmer over three months, there may be a drop below $100 over six months, toward $90, on the new supplies, Kamal Naqvi, global head of metals at Credit Suisse Group AG, told the conference.

Previous Page 1 2 Next Page

Hot Topics

Editor's Picks
...
...