Largest iron ore miners smashing Chinese competitors

Largest iron ore miners smashing Chinese competitors

It may sound odd, but there are a few iron ore producers quite happy with the slump in the commodity price. They are the market’s “big three “ —Rio Tinto (ASX:RIO), BHP Billiton (ASX:BHP) and Vale (NYSE:VALE)— whose vast low-cost mines are driving Chinese higher-cost rivals out of the market.

According to a recent research report by Australian analyst Michael Komesaroff (subs. required), the trium­virate of global iron ore miners have kept supply growth at full tilt even as demand decelerates.

“As long as this state of affairs continues, the ore price will stay below the level dictated by cost-curve fundamentals: probably in the US$95-US$100 per tonne range,” he writes in the paper published by the global research powerhouse Gavekal’s China-based arm Gavekal Dragonomics.

Komesaroff notes the drop in prices has nothing to do with a lack of demand, but with the fact that Rio Tinto, BHP and Vale continue to ramp supply up. In fact, Australian annual output is now 150 million tonnes, higher than in 2011.

The problem for Chinese producers, which feed 35% of the local demand, is that their ore is lower grade than the foreign imports. At the same time, their production costs are at the upper end of the big three.

The analyst believes the situation is not sustainable for much longer and that once high-cost Chinese miners are driven out of the market, iron ore prices will rise back to around $110.

Collateral damage

Mid-cap Australian iron ore miners will also fall victim of this fight to the death, as the ore price is beginning to reach levels where they will struggle to break even.

According to UBS estimates, published by The Sydney Morning Herald, Australian miners Grange Resources (ASX:GRR) and Gindalbie Metals (ASX:GBG) are facing uneconomic production, with break-even prices of $87 a tonne and $98 a tonne respectively.

Atlas Iron (ASX:AGO) and Arrium (ASX:ARI) are next in the firing line with cash costs over $80 a tonne.

No one is predicting a move back to the early days of the iron ore trade when the price, set during secretive annual contract negotiations, never strayed from $10 a tonne for more than 20 years.

But it is worth noting that back in 2007 the commodity was still trading at $36 a tonne.

And the all time high of $192 in February 2011 now seems like nothing more than an aberration.

Largest iron ore miners smashing Chinese competitors

Source: The Steel Index

 

Image by Inc| Shutterstock.com

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