The Chinese import price of 62% Fe content ore jumped to $125.77 per dry metric tonne on Tuesday, according to data supplied by Fastmarkets MB.
The price of the steelmaking raw material is up a stunning 73% year-to-date and is now trading at its highest since January 2014.
Iron ore’s rally is primarily supply driven. Vale has suspended 93m tonnes of production following January’s deadly dam collapse in Brazil, while Western Australian output was hampered by storms.
However, the supply crunch is beginning to ease. Rio de Janeiro-based Vale recently received permission to bring its 30m tonnes a year Brucutu operation back into full production.
According to cargo tracking data supplied by Refinitiv,Brazilian exports in June was roughly 500,000 tonnes more than in January this year, with the last monthly data not impacted by the Brumadinho disaster.
At the same time, Australian exports are hitting records with shipments leaving the busiest iron ore terminal in the world – Port Hedland in Western Australia – up more than 20% year on year at the end of June.
China imports around 70% of the world’s seaborne iron ore which is estimated at more than 1.5 billion annually and Beijing’s economic stimulus has also buoyed the market. Chinese steel output is up by more than 10% so far this year, and is now running at an annualized rate of over 1 billion tonnes, and port stocks are 17% below levels seen this time last year.
But here the outlook is also becoming murkier and in its latest quarterly report, the Australia’s Department of Industry predicts Chinese steel output – which represents half global production – has reached its high water mark.
The official forecaster of the world’s top exporting country sees Chinese steel production peaking at 940 million tonnes this year before going into a steady decline, dragging down imports in the process.
This, coupled with supply returning to normal levels, will see the price fall to half today’s levels in 2021. The Australia government’s office of the Chief Economist estimates iron ore prices would average $80 a tonne this year before falling to an average of just $57 a tonne in 2021 as the seaborne market returns to surplus.
The price used by the Dept. is free-on-board Australia, so for comparison with the benchmark, add between $6 – $10 for cost and freight.
2 Comments
Aurelio Yavorsky
Mack @Mo Bro: No where corrupted than Donald. The guy is a joke. October 24, 2016 at 5:10pm Log in to Reply
LN perni
Metal dynamics will change beyond imagination in coming years.