Thứ Ba, 20 tháng 10, 2015

BHP Cuts China Steel Forecast to 1 Billion Tons

 BHP Cuts China Steel Forecast to 1 Billion Tons


Steel production in China will peak at less than 1 billion metric tons as the world’s biggest producer accelerates its transition to a consumer-driven economy, according to a new forecast from BHP Billiton Ltd.
Production will peak at between 935 million and 985 million tons in the middle of next decade, the Melbourne-based company said Tuesday, when reporting profit plunged 52 percent. The prediction is as much as 15 percent less than its May estimate that output would peak between 1 billion and 1.1 billion tons in the mid-2020s.
The revision by BHP, the world’s biggest miner, contrasts with rival Rio Tinto Group whose most recent forecast is that China will produce 1 billion tons of steel by 2030. The largest mining companies have been wrong-footed on slower growth in China, Glencore Plc Chief Executive Officer Ivan Glasenberg said last week, with demand getting tricky to call.
“Our most recent analysis suggested a slight reduction from what we previously spoke about,” BHP CEO Andrew Mackenzie told reporters on a media call Tuesday. “That’s really because the Chinese as we expected are managing the move from investment to consumption I think very sensibly.”
Mining companies are confronting a commodities slump that’s hurting profits and shares amid concern that China’s deepening slowdown will undermine demand and exacerbate supply gluts from crude oil to iron ore. Chinese steel production declined 1.3 percent in the first half for this year, triggered largely by a slowing construction sector, BHP said.

Lower But Longer

“Most people in the market will tell you that China’s steel production and demand have peaked” Xu Huimin, an analyst at Huatai Great Wall Futures Co. in Shanghai, said by phone. “Mining companies are usually the most optimistic about demand conditions. For them to start cutting back outlook just reaffirms that the slowdown in China is worsening.”
The price of iron ore lost 40 percent in the past 12 months as BHP, Rio and Vale SA expanded low-cost output, seeking to boost sales volumes and cut costs, just as demand from China faltered.
Ore with 62 percent content sank 5 percent to $53.28 a dry ton on Monday, a four-week low, according to Metal Bulletin Ltd. The commodity, used to make steel, bottomed at $44.59 on July 8, a record in data going back to May 2009.
“We expect moderate but sustainable growth in Chinese steel production over the next decade,” BHP said in the earnings statement. “An extended view on the life cycle of steel usage has resulted in a lower but longer plateau for crude steel production.”

Exports Soar

After decades of rapid growth spurred an unprecedented expansion in steel production, China’s now grappling with excess capacity as a property-led slowdown crimps demand. Weaker domestic consumption prompted mills to seek overseas buyers, sending exports 27 percent higher to 62.13 million tons in the first seven months.
Although China’s steel shipments are at an all-time high, BHP expects subdued crude steel production growth over the remainder of 2015, with some upside potential should the construction sector recover.
About 100 million tons of low-cost iron ore supply will be added this year, outpacing demand growth and forcing less competitive miners both within and outside of China to close, according to BHP.
“We don’t find China impossible to read,” Mackenzie said. “We’ve been at this game for decades and I think, by and large, we’ve made forecasts about the development of China and we’ve made very sound business decisions off those forecasts that have proved to be correct.”

Nervousness of steel

Nervousness of steel

A wave of cheap Chinese metal exports hits the region.

IN THE minutes from the Australian central bank’s latest meeting, one third of the text was devoted to analysing China’s economy and markets. Little wonder. China’s seemingly bottomless appetite for steel has sustained Australian growth over the past decade. With Chinese investment now slowing, those fat years are over. This helped to undermine the economic credentials of Tony Abbott, who lost his job as Australia’s prime minister on September 14th.

China’s steel consumption is roughly half the global total. It peaked in 2013, and ebbed as the country’s frenzied building slowed. Daniel Kang of J.P. Morgan, a bank, forecasts that China’s annual demand for steel will continue falling until 2017 and will settle at about 10% below its high-water mark.
That may not sound like a big drop but it has left Australia with a major hangover. It is the world’s biggest exporter of iron ore, the main ingredient in steel, and its miners had assumed that China would sustain its ultra-fast growth. Instead, iron ore prices are nearly two-thirds lower than two years ago.

Demand for steel in India and South-East Asia has started to improve, but is far from enough to replace the Chinese shortfall. The declining value of Australia’s exports has become a drag on growth. As mining companies cut costs and cancel projects, the eventual impact on the economy could be even worse. Adding to the pain, Australia’s coal exports to China have also plummeted, hit by China’s industrial slowdown and its shift to cleaner energy.

But compared to other Asian states, Australia is still the lucky country or, better said, the less unlucky one. It has a wide mix of commodities. While Indonesia, for instance, relies on fossil-fuel exports, Australia can turn to milk and meat. The weaker Australian dollar is luring even more Chinese tourists. Moreover, Australian miners have less to fret about than do steelmakers in Japan, India and South Korea.

The latter not only have little hope of selling steel to China, but must now compete against shiploads of cheap Chinese metal (see chart). With so much excess capacity, China is likely to ship more of the metal abroad this year than Japan, the world’s second-biggest producer, could make if its steel mills were running at full capacity. India and South Korea, the world’s fourth- and fifth-biggest producers, have imposed anti-dumping duties to repel Chinese imports.

As steel prices fall, Australia’s biggest miners are using their high-quality, low-cost iron ore to take a bigger slice of the global market. For them, it does not matter much who is making the metal, so long as it is still being made

 

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Global steel output slips for fourth consecutive month in August


Global crude steel output fell for a fourth consecutive month in August, mainly due to lower production in China and Japan, the world's biggest and second-biggest producers, industry data showed on Monday.
August output dropped 3 percent to 132 million tonnes from a year ago, with China output down 3.5 percent at 66.9 million tonnes, and Japan down 5.8 percent at 8.8 million tonnes, World Steel Association (Worldsteel) data showed.
China accounts for about half of global steel production. Its output has been falling as its once stellar pace of economic growth slows, leaving it with steel over-capacity estimated at around 300 million tonnes.
The country has been exporting steel at record levels as a result, a factor that has helped pushed global steel prices to their lowest in more than 10 years, with little prospect of a near term recovery.
As a case in point, the data showed global capacity utilisation rates fell 3.6 percent to 68 percent in August -- marking a decline in mills' pricing power because of their collective ability to increase output if demand recovers.
Elsewhere, the data also showed output in the United States, the world's third-largest producer, fell 10 percent as mills there battle cheap imports and labour disputes, while output in India, the world's fourth-largest producer, rose 2.8 percent.
India, home to about a billion people and with a growing economy, is one of the few bright spots for world steel demand.

(Reporting by Maytaal Angel; Editing by Mark Potter)



NAM KIM STEEL GROUP MANUFACTURER




Tel: +84650 37 9999 2 (Mr. Joshua)
Mobile/Viber/Whatsapp: +84 169.949.3.696
Skype: thaiphikhanh_bily
Email: khanhtp@namkimgroup.vn
Webiste: www.namkimgroup.vn