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Steel industry outlook still hazy

By Zhang Qi | China Daily | Updated: 2010-09-13 08:27

Steel industry outlook still hazy

Imported iron ore is unloaded at Lianyungang Port in Jiangsu. Wu He / for China Daily

BEIJING - Despite the prospects of lower iron ore prices for the fourth quarter of this year, the overall outlook for domestic steel mills still remains hazy due to weak demand from downstream sectors, industry sources said.

Iron ore prices fixed by the big three global miners - Vale, BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto - are expected to fall by 10 percent in the fourth quarter, according to estimates from major steel indexes.

The prices of iron ore fine exported by Vale is likely to be fixed at around $134 a ton excluding freight for the fourth quarter, compared with $147 a ton for the third quarter, based on the average prices for the past three months.

Vale, the world's biggest iron ore producer, said it would cut prices by 10 percent in October due to weak demand from Chinese steel mills for the last five months.

Rio Tinto said the contract prices for the steelmaking commodity is likely to fall by 13 percent in the fourth quarter.

Should that materialize, it would be the first time that global miners cut iron ore price after the big miners decided to price the commodity on a quarterly basis compared with annual contracts earlier.

Analysts said the iron ore price decline will have little impact on the fortunes of steelmakers. The 10 percent fall in ore prices will hardly offset the pressure from falling steel prices, they said.

Prices of Australian iron ore fell by $26 per ton in the third quarter, while steel-making costs went up by 274 yuan ($40) per ton during the period. But steel prices declined more than 300 yuan per ton during the same period, said Hu Kai, an analyst from Umetals.com

"Downstream sectors like auto and home appliances are still overstocked on steel and this could weaken demand in the fourth quarter," said Hu.

Domestic steel prices are still under pressure due to weak demand and dwindling exports after the scrapping of export rebates, said Ma Guoqing, general manager of Baosteel.

Chen Ying, the company's chief financial officer, said domestic steel prices in the fourth quarter are likely to decline further.

Steel production in China reached a four-month low in June due to weak demand from real estate companies and the automobile industry.

Steel output fell by 3.9 percent in July to 51.7 million tons compared with June.

Nearly 40 percent of domestic steel mills have been forced to make cutbacks or put their plants on a maintenance mode, due to rising ore costs and falling steel prices, said Luo Bingsheng, vice-chairman of China Iron & Steel Association.

But most of the steelmakers have ramped up production price this month, said sources. China's largest steel producer Hebei Iron & Steel Group raised steel prices by 300 yuan ($44.27) for September, following by other major steel makers.

Average steel prices in China peaked the most in April since August 2009. But prices began to fall after the government released macroeconomic polices to control property prices, part of the nation's effort to slow GDP growth, which eased to 10.3 percent in the second quarter from 11.9 percent in the first.

China Daily

(China Daily 09/13/2010)

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