2021.05.14
Iron ore is a mined raw material from which crude iron, also known as pig iron, can be economically extracted. Nearly all of the world’s mined iron ore is used to make steel, which is an essential part of our modern infrastructure (structures, automobiles, machinery, etc.).
To produce one tonne of steel, roughly 1.5 tonnes of iron ore are required. The higher the iron content in the ore, the higher it is graded and the more valuable it becomes.
China currently consumes more iron ore than any other nation, as it’s by far the world’s biggest steel producer. In fact, its output is greater than all other steelmaking countries in the world combined.
According to data published by China’s National Bureau of Statistics, the country churned out a record 1.05 billion tonnes of crude steel in 2020 — 6% more than the previous year — with “demand boosted by Beijing’s stimulus measures for infrastructure such as bridges and roads and both new commercial and residential buildings.”
This year, steel output from Asia’s leading economy is set to surpass that total.
From January to February, its crude steel output rose nearly 13% compared with a year earlier, as mills increased production in expectation of more robust demand from the construction and manufacturing sectors.
The Metallurgical Industry Planning and Research Institute is projecting a 1.4% rise to 1.065 billion tonnes for 2021, implying a corresponding increase in China’s iron ore demand to meet that output.
Iron Ore Rally
Iron ore prices recently broke a new record amid a sustained rally in commodities prices as demand from top consumer China remains as robust as ever.
Because China’s domestic iron ore supply is relatively low-grade and expensive to process, many steelmakers there find it cheaper and more efficient to import high-grade iron ore.
According to data from Fastmarkets MB, benchmark 62% Fe fines imported into Northern China (CFR Qingdao) are now changing hands for over $195 per tonne – up more than 130% over the past 12 months.
In 2020, spot prices of iron ore with 62% iron content for delivery to China jumped 73%, according to SteelHome consultancy.
At the center of the latest rally is rising steel prices, from Asia to North America. Steel demand remains strong as economies – China in particular – continue their massive investments in steel-intensive infrastructure.
The World Steel Association forecasts global steel demand to grow 5.8% this year to exceed pre-pandemic levels, followed by another 2.7% increase the year after. China’s consumption, about half of the global total, will keep growing from record levels.
Last week, inventories of main steel products in China – rebar, wire rods, coils and plates – fell 5% from the prior week, while apparent consumption grew 5.3%, data from Mysteel consultancy showed.
Strong demand may encourage Chinese mills to continue ramping up steel output, even as the market tries to digest the impact of the removal of steel export tax rebates and import tariffs announced last month.
Supply Reform
On the other hand, China is also trying to rein in its world-leading steel supply. It views the supply boom during the coronavirus crisis as a contributing factor to the nation’s rising carbon emissions, in contrast to other big economies.
Measures aimed at cleaning up the world’s biggest steel industry have pushed mill profitability to the highest in more than a decade, which according to CRU Group analysts “incentivize mills to build up stocks and to charge more high-grade ore to lift productivity.”
Production restrictions in China’s top steelmaking city of Tangshan during the peak demand season have brought down stocks at commercial warehouses and created a “bullish atmosphere” for the market, Sinosteel Futures analysts said in a note to Reuters.
According to S&P Global Platts, China’s domestic hot-rolled coil prices have risen around 12% since early March, reaching their highest level since mid-2008.
“We have seen a bit of an additional iron ore demand for the purpose of increasing inventories,” CRU Group’s principal analyst Erik Hedborg explained in a Bloomberg interview.
Hence, expectations are mounting that benchmark iron ore prices will soon reach $200 a tonne as Chinese steelmakers ramp up production and iron ore demand continues to improve.
Kim Christie, a senior analyst at consultancy firm Wood Mackenzie, says “iron ore prices could go higher in the short-term and exceeding $200 a tonne is definitely possible.”
Citigroup also expects benchmark prices to hit $200 within weeks, estimating a supply deficit of 18 million tonnes during the first three quarters of 2021.
Meanwhile, Morgan Stanley has called China’s supply reforms a possible “game changer” for demand for premium iron ore, with grade differentials unlikely to normalize any time soon.
China-Australia Tensions
Also fueling iron ore’s relentless surge is the intensifying diplomatic spat between China and Australia. On May 6, China “indefinitely” suspended all activity under a China-Australia Strategic Economic Dialogue, further exacerbating the strained relationship between the two countries.
Australia is by far the biggest iron ore producer in the world, followed by Brazil. Accordingly, Australia is China’s top supplier of the raw material.
Last year, Australian shipments rose 7% to 713 million tonnes, about two-thirds of China’s import needs, data from the General Administration of Customs showed. Another 700-800 million tonnes of iron ore are estimated to be shipped to China this year.
As such, there are growing concerns that souring relations between Beijing and Canberra may eventually disrupt that bilateral iron ore trade.
While “China is unlikely to ban imports of Australian commodities which they rely heavily on as it will impact the domestic economy,” as Wood Mackenzie senior economist Yanting Zhou put it, chances are China may look into ways to reduce its reliance on Australia.
Remember, Chinese steelmakers tend to prefer high-grade ore (defined as over 65% iron content), which limits the number of viable sources.
India, for example, is also a major iron ore producer, but two-thirds of its past exports to China had less than 58% iron content, according to Indian mining industry estimates. While imports from India jumped a significant 88% to 45 million tonnes last year, that figure accounted for just 1.8% of China’s import total.
In West Africa, China has interests in several mines with abundant iron ore reserves, but most of them remain inaccessible due to bureaucratic wrangling and limited capital. Even with these foreign projects up and running, their aggregate production would be a small fraction of the global market share dominated by top producers Australia and Brazil.
Still, even without any political tensions, Australia and Brazil alone could not meet China’s demand for iron ore at this rate, increasing the need for China to further diversify its iron ore supply in the long term.
Richard (Rick) Mills
aheadoftheherd.com
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