Pro-Life
15 años hace
China to push iron ore prices up
Updated: 15:15, Tuesday December 22, 2009
http://www2.skynews.com.au/business/article.aspx?id=409505
Iron ore prices are tipped to rise 20 per cent next year, thanks to surging demand from China.
According to a Dow Jones Newswires survey, the the annual contract price for iron ore fines, free on board, from Australia with a 62 per cent ferrous content is forecast to rise to $71.89 a metric ton in 2010.
Despite that forecast, the Chinese industry is already forecasting a tough line in annual contract negotiations.
Macquarie estimates that China's demand should grow to 654 million tonnes next year, making up a significant part of the world's demand of 1 billion tonnes.
Pro-Life
15 años hace
Iron ore price unaffordable in 2010
(This should fully explain the triple gains this has made... which will probably continue)
http://www.bloombergutv.com/news/latest-business-news-bricnations/40767/iron-ore-price-unaffordable-in-2010--.html
SHANGHAI: The global steel industry will suffer more losses should iron ore prices increase next year, Baoshan Iron & Steel Co., China's largest steelmaker, said.
"There aren't many profitable steelmakers at present," Shanghai-based Baoshan told the official Xinhua News Agency in an interview posted on the company's Web site. "A further rise in iron ore prices would cause more losses."
Rising steel demand and prices in China, the largest producer, led Macquarie Securities Group to predict a 30% gain in iron ore prices next year. Baosteel's comments underscore the differences to be bridged in annual price talks between steelmakers and the world's three biggest iron ore suppliers BHP Billiton Ltd., Rio Tinto Group and Vale SA.
"There's room for prices of raw materials to rise only when mills can pass on the cost pressures," Baosteel said in the Xinhua interview. "The foundation of Chinese steelmakers' profitability is not solid as the demand is largely created by the government's stimulus policy amid a global crisis."
China's $586 billion stimulus spending has boosted steel demand from automakers, home-appliance manufacturers and builders. That's fueled record imports of iron ore, used to make steel, this year. Baoshan Steel raised benchmark steel prices by 8% for January delivery, the first increase since September, on Dec. 10.
Ship plates
"Demand from the auto and appliance industries has been strong since the second quarter," Baoshan Steel said in the Xinhua story. "We can't meet our clients' needs even at full capacity."
Still, the improving demand and prices for products needed by makers of cars and appliances have been offset by declines in other products, Baoshan Steel said. Ship plates are lossmaking, it said.
Baoshan Steel's comments come as analysts including Deutsche Bank AG forecasts rising steel demand and as cash prices for iron soared. Steel price increases by Baoshan Steel and rivals signal demand growth in China will outpace supply expansion in 2010, Deutsche Bank said.
Weekly cash prices for iron ore imported by China from India gained 5.2%, the biggest gain in six straight weeks, to a record $111.5 a metric ton last week, according to Metal Bulletin. The cash price for Australian ore also reached a record $107.4 a ton as of Dec. 18, according to the Steel Index.
"Cash iron ore prices rose on bets that steel prices will rise over the long term," said Zhu Limin, an analyst with Shanghai Securities Co.
Benchmark Australian iron ore prices were settled at about $61 a ton, excluding freight charges, this year. Shipping the ore to China's Qingdao port from Western Australia would cost about $11.62 a ton, according to the Baltic Dry Index.
LCrigger
16 años hace
Steel Yourself For Earnings Season
By Brad Zigler
Zigler discusses the earnings reports for steel and agricultural companies coming out later this week, and what they could mean for SLX, MOO and both industries as a whole.
From Hard Assets Investor (excerpt):
"It's going to be a busy week for earnings watchers. Especially those tracking the agricultural and steel sectors. Iowa's Terra Industries Inc. (NYSE: TRA), a producer of fertilizers and agrichemicals, is expected to announce first-quarter earnings of 43 cents a share Tuesday – about half its year-ago profit.
Analysts have also forecast a 75-cents-per-share loss for Ohio-based AK Steel Holding Corp. (NYSE: AKS) to be announced that same day, a negative 191% year-over-year turnaround.
On Wednesday, Steel Dynamics, Inc. (Nasdaq: STLD)'s numbers are due, followed by a slate of Thursday releases by Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan (NYSE: POT), Bunge Ltd. (NYSE: BG), Reliance Steel & Aluminum Co. (NYSE: RS) and Nucor Corp. (NYSE: NUE).
The late-week reports are expected to show an average 93% decline in year-over-year results, with the steel companies getting the worst of it. The deterioration forecast for the four steel companies noted averages 126%; aggregate earnings for the three agribusinesses are expected to drop 62%.
Year-over-year stock performance pretty much mirrors the earnings disparity. Since April 2008, the Market Vectors Steel ETF (NYSE Arca: SLX), an exchange-traded portfolio tracking the NYSE Arca Steel Index, has swooned 63%; the 44 issues proxied by the Market Vectors Agribusiness ETF (NYSE Arca: MOO) dipped 51%."
Read the full article here: http://www.hardassetsinvestor.com/component/content/article/3/1526-steel-yourself-for-earnings-season.html?Itemid=39
JMoola
16 años hace
Why Steel ETF Is Showing Renewed Strength
by: Tom Lydon April 19, 2009
After a severe drop in orders last year, steel, along with related its related ETF, may start to pick up as large economies increase consumption.
China, the world’s largest consumer of copper and steel, looks to be recovering and demand for steel is likely to grow, according to Forbes.
During the sudden reversal of economic conditions last year, steel plummeted on reduced orders from automotive, construction and industrial equipment markets.
Prices for steel have been steadily dropping and steel companies are cutting production. Some investors fear higher Chinese export subsidies may cut global steel prices. Outside of China, production has dropped 37% compared to last year, and it has fallen to levels last seen in 1967.
Credit Suisse upgraded the steel sector weighting to overweight from benchmark after citing a recovering China, which accounts for around 35% of global steel demand, reports Donna Kardos for The Wall Street Journal.
* Market Vectors Steel ETF (SLX): up 15.1% year-to-date; up 41.2% in the last month
http://seekingalpha.com/article/131665-why-steel-etf-is-showing-renewed-strength?source=yahoo
JMoola
16 años hace
US Financial Stocks Up On Durable Goods Orders Report
http://online.wsj.com/article/BT-CO-20090325-709441.html
Good for the steel industry.
Examples of consumer durable goods include cars, appliances, business equipment, electronic equipment, home furnishings and fixtures, houseware and accessories, photographic equipment, recreational goods, sporting goods, toys and games.