Tuesday 22 December 2020

@AlliesFin Serve Stock Market's Post

*Fatal Landslide in Brazil Pushes Iron Ore Toward Record.*

Prices of the steel ingredient rose 7.8% Monday as investors bet on tightening supply at a time of strong demand.
SYD­NEY—Iron-ore prices are surg­ing to­ward a record as a land­slide at a Brazil­ian iron-ore mine in­ten­si­fies con­cerns about sup­ply and Chi­nese de­mand runs hot.
The price of iron ore soared 7.8% to $176.90 a met­ric ton Mon­day, its high­est since Sep­tember 2011 and al­most dou­ble its value at the start of the year, ac­cord­ing to data from S&P Global Platts.
Iron ore, the main in­gre­di­ent in steel, is one of the world’s most-traded com­modi­ties and is among the best per­form­ing as­sets of 2020. It is now less than 10% from a record price of $193 a ton reached in Feb­ruary 2011.
The land­slide last week at Vale SA’s Cór­rego do Fei­jão mine, which killed one worker, has raised fresh con­cerns about sup­plies from Brazil. Ship­ments from that coun­try—the sec­ond big­gest ex­porter of iron ore, af­ter Aus­tralia—have yet to fully re­cover from ear­lier waste-dam col­lapses and pan­demic-re­lated dis­rup­tions to port and rail fa­cil­i­ties.
The city of Bru­mad­inho, in Brazil’s Mi­nas Gerais state, where the Cór­rego do Fei­jão mine is lo­cated, has sus­pended Vale’s op­er­at­ing li­cense for seven days, Vale said. It is the same part of Brazil where a dam burst in 2019, killing 270 peo­ple.
“As it is close to where the orig­i­nal dam fail­ure oc­curred, the mar­ket is be­com­ing in­creas­ingly con­cerned that Vale will strug­gle to hit its new, lower tar­get for out­put,” said Daniel Hynes, se­nior com­mod­ity strate­gist at Aus­tralia and New Zea­land Bank­ing Group Ltd.
The mar­ket was caught out this month when Vale said it would fail to meet an ear­lier pro­duc­tion tar­get for 2020 and set a 2021 goal well be­low an­a­lysts’ ex­pec­ta-tions, Mr. Hynes said. Vale pro­duces about 20% of the world’s iron ore traded by sea.
There are also con­cerns about sup­plies from Aus­tralia as the coun­try heads into its an­nual cy­clone sea­son, while China—the top buyer of iron ore glob­ally—has taken aim at com­modi­ties from coal to wine with tar­iffs and other re­stric­tions on im­ports as part of a broader diplo­matic dis­pute.
“There is no won­der the mar­ket is plac­ing a sup­ply risk pre­mium to prices at the mo­ment,” Mr. Hynes said.
Stim­u­lus in China and a rel­a­tively low price for met­al­lur­gi­cal coal, also used to make steel, have given mills the flex­i­bil­ity to pay more for iron ore, Aus­tralia’s gov­ern­ment said in a re­port Mon­day.
China pro­duces more than half of the world’s steel, and has been churn­ing it out at near-record rates re­cently. Its crude steel out­put to­taled 92.2 mil­lion tons in Oc­to­ber, up 13% on the same month a year ear­lier, ac­cord­ing to the World Steel As­so­ci­a­tion. No­vember data are due to be pub­lished later Tues­day.
A num­ber of an­a­lysts boosted their fore­casts for iron ore in re­cent weeks as prices rose.
J.P. Mor­gan lifted its 2021 price fore­cast by 20% to $126 a ton, cit­ing strong Chi­nese steel out­put and the softer-than-ex­pected pro­duc­tion fore­casts from Vale.
“China data keeps get­ting bet­ter,” J.P. Mor­gan an­a­lyst Lyn­don Fa­gan wrote in a Dec. 14 note. Gauges of Chi­na’s man­u­fac­tur-ing and non­man­u­fac­tur­ing ac­tiv­ity re­cently posted their high­est lev­els in three and eight years, re­spec­tively, sig­nal­ing a broad­en­ing re­cov­ery in the world’s sec­ond-largest econ­omy.
Spec­u­la­tors have also been stok­ing the rally, an­a­lysts say. Jef­feries Fi­nan­cial Group Inc. on Dec. 10 fore­cast the iron-ore price would peak be­tween $180 and $200 a ton in the first quar­ter of 2021.
Still, the price for the steel­mak­ing com­mod­ity should re­treat in the year ahead as Chi­nese de­mand cools and sup­plies re­cover, said Cap­i­tal Eco­nomics an­a­lyst Samuel Bur­man. He fore­casts the price to re­turn to $100 a ton by the end of next year.
Cit­i­group Inc. has the same fore­cast for end-of-2021 prices, al­though the bank ex­pects iron ore to re­main well
By: via @AlliesFin Serve Stock Market

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