Chinese President Xi Jinping obviously wasn’t speaking for the world’s iron-ore producers when he pronounced this month that the risks from his country’s slowing growth “aren’t that scary.”
The world’s mining giants have wagered $120 billion that steel production in China won’t peak until as late as 2030. Increasingly, it looks like they got that wrong, a miscalculation that could have huge consequences for companies led by BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP) and Rio Tinto Group.
“I’ve always taken the view that the miners had the best intelligence on this as large investment decisions are based on it,” Richard Knights, a mining analyst at Liberum Capital Ltd. said by phone. “But if they get it wrong by a just a small margin, that has major implications for profitability and the share price for years to come.”
Iron ore is the worst-performing commodity this year, reaching a five-year low yesterday, and the slowing economy has persuaded some analysts and steelmakers that peak steel is nearing in China, the world’s largest producer.
Output in China will reach its high-water mark in as little as three years, prompting plant closures rather than expansions, according to Wolfgang Eder, chairman of the World Steel Association and chief executive officer of Voestalpine AG, Austria’s biggest steelmaker.
“There has to be a restructuring of the Chinese steel industry,” Eder said. “The iron-ore producers are getting more and more aware that their growth expectations have to be redefined. There are enormous over-capacities and more is coming on stream. This will increase the pressure.”
Big Change
It’s a big change. Every year for the past decade, China has added new steel mills with the capacity to exceed the annual production of Germany, the largest steelmaker in Europe. The surge in new blast furnaces created a consumption vortex, swallowing half the world’s iron ore and creating unprecedented wealth from Australia’s Pilbara region to Brazil’s Amazon basin. That gravy train, generating annual iron-ore sales of about $160 billion last year, is slowing.
The major flaw of producers of iron ore, the most traded commodity after oil, is they tend to be “over-bullish,” said Kirill Chuyko, head of equity research at BCS Financial Group in Moscow.
“Humans make mistakes,” said Chuyko, who thinks peak steel has been reached. “Chinese demand is going south.”
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As China, the world’s second-biggest economy, heads for the weakest expansion in more than two decades, Communist Party leaders have discussed paring the growth target for 2015, according to a person with knowledge of their talks. The prospect growth will keep slowing has hurt commodities prices from coal to crude oil.
Structural Surplus
Iron-ore has dropped 47 percent to $71.80 a ton this year, the lowest since 2009, according to Metal Bulletin Ltd. Citigroup Inc. forecast the commodity could fall below $60 a ton next year. It peaked at $191.70 in February 2011.
Spokesmen for BHP and Rio declined to comment.
The iron-ore market shifted to a “structural” surplus in mid-2014, Goldman analysts Fawzi Hanano and Eugene King said in a Nov. 6 report. That excess will widen to almost 300 million tons by 2017, they said. Miners led by BHP and Rio have embarked on $120 billion of spending on new mines since 2011.
A total of 24 iron-ore projects have either started or been approved since 2011, according to Goldman Sachs. The mines have a combined annual capacity of 726 million tons and include operations in Australia, Brazil, Sierra Leone, Canada, Russia, Ukraine and Liberia.
Steel Growth
BHP lowered its expectations for Chinese steel growth last month, though it still expects the country to increase production 25 percent by 2020-2025 to 1 billion tons to 1.1 billion tons. Rio expects China’s output to reach 1 billion tons by about 2030.
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BHP and Rio operate in the iron-rich Pilbara region of Western Australia, the world’s largest production hub. Rio plans to boost output 11 percent this year to 295 million tons, rising to at least 330 million tons from 2015. BHP is increasing production from the region to about 245 million tons in the 12 months through June.
Global seaborne iron ore surged almost fourfold in the past decade to 1.2 billion tons last year, according to Bloomberg Intelligence, which predicts a further increase to 1.65 billion tons by 2018. For each ton of steel production, 1.6 tons of iron ore is needed.
“The seaborne iron ore market has already transitioned to a structural surplus, which we expect to grow as slower growth in Chinese steel production is met by continued record growth in seaborne iron ore supply, mainly from incumbent low-cost producers,” the Goldman analysts wrote.
Source: Bloomberg