Ore bounces

Advertisement

My call for a short term bounce in iron ore is firming up. Overnight we saw positive moves across the complex:

And to the charts. For steel:

As well as ore itself:

Advertisement

Looks like the head and shoulders pattern may miss, which is good news to say the least. Nonetheless, I would caution against hopes of any powerful or sustained rebound. There were two great stories in the FT overnight describing the parlous condition of Chinese steel profits. The following is from a peach by Kate Mackenzie:

UBS’s Australian resources analyst Glyn Lawcock and team returned a few days ago from their second trip to China in two months with less good news than they would’ve liked.

“The message is that the government is unlikely to step up and stimulate given the economy appears to be doing ok based on recent GDP prints. But then the word on the street is that it is much tougher than what it appears.”

Let’s skip to their visit to two steel mills in Tangshan in the eastern province of Hebei, which is known for its steel industry. One mill was running about 70 per cent capacity and the other, larger mill running at full capacity. Both were losing the equivalent of about $30 per tonne of steel, but felt it was better to keep producing at least for now. (Emphasis ours throughout)

“No production cuts as yet, but the mills have begun to mull the idea of cuts over and they may be just around the corner, but in the meantime they are feeding their blast furnaces with lower Fe content iron ore to bring down output at the margin, but this move is more about lowering costs. The mills spoken to didn’t think a US$120/t price floor would be there this time round given the level of steel prices due to over supply.”

How low would iron ore prices need to get in order for those mills to be profitable again? Lawcock estimates the two mills he visited would need further drops in spot prices of $18 – $20 a tonne to become cash break even; but that assumes no further price in steel prices. He was also told some steel mills were losing at least double the amount reported by those two mills.

“So what were the steel mills saying? The smaller mill thought that the price would definitely go below US$120/t cfr based on 1) the bounce in Oct/Nov 11 coincided with positive commentary on social housing by the central government and no stimulatory comments are expected this time round, and 2) demand is weak and production cuts are becoming more likely every day the steel prices remain low;”

A couple of days earlier they spoke to an unidentified iron ore trader in Beijing:

“An example of how tough it is for iron ore traders who have been caught with material as steel mills look to push out their buying. The iron ore manager said that he was offered lump at RMB1,065/t incl. VAT delivered to his mill 24 hrs ago and now that same parcel is on offer at RMB965/t. A US$16/t drop in 24 hrs;”

There was a tiny bit of positive news for the iron ore industry: said iron ore trader believes the low inventories could lead to a rally. Meanwhile the steel mills think that the official Chinese steel output data is lagging by a month — so some steel mills may have already cut production.

The iron ore producers are naturally paying close attention to whatever is going on in China… but going ahead with big expansion plans anyway:

Steel growth vs iron ore cap growth - JPMorgan

The price-volume swap is a very dubious proposition.

Advertisement
About the author
David Llewellyn-Smith is Chief Strategist at the MB Fund and MB Super. David is the founding publisher and editor of MacroBusiness and was the founding publisher and global economy editor of The Diplomat, the Asia Pacific’s leading geo-politics and economics portal. He is also a former gold trader and economic commentator at The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, the ABC and Business Spectator. He is the co-author of The Great Crash of 2008 with Ross Garnaut and was the editor of the second Garnaut Climate Change Review.