Pages

Thursday, July 19, 2012

Iron Ore-Shanghai rebar at contract low, ore at 8-mth trough - Reuters

Thu Jul 19, 2012 1:30am EDT

  * Down 26 pct from year-ago, iron ore seen falling further      * China steel demand may not recover before Aug/Sept-trader        By Manolo Serapio Jr      SINGAPORE, July 19 (Reuters) - China steel futures sagged to  a contract low on Thursday as demand in the world's top consumer  showed no signs of recovery, dragging down spot iron ore prices  to the weakest since November.      Iron ore is now down 26 percent from a year ago, but traders  said buyers are still not biting, convinced prices would fall  further with Chinese mills likely to curb output some more.      "If you throw some cargoes in the market nobody's willing to  buy, nobody's even willing to think about buying," said a  physical iron ore trader in Shanghai.      "With prices going down the way they are, who wants to take  a chance? There's absolutely little hope."      Benchmark iron ore with 62 percent iron content  .IO62-CNI=SI fell for a sixth straight day on Wednesday, to  $128.30 a tonne, the lowest since Nov. 8, based on data from  Steel Index.      The Shanghai trader said the price could fall by another $5,  and sees $120 as a floor.      The last time iron ore prices fell below $120 was late last  year -- dropping to a low of $116.90 in October -- the lowest  since December 2009. The price slide, fueled by a decline in  steel prices, prompted Chinese mills to seek delays of shipments  from miners and to move contract pricing even closer to daily  spot rates.          But iron ore's Wednesday losses may well extend as the  most-traded January Shanghai rebar futures hit a  contract low of 3,824 yuan ($600) a tonne on Thursday.       Since the January contract became the most active last week,  the price has set a contract low in seven sessions.      Spot steel prices have similarly dropped, with steel billet  in China's key Tangshan area at 3,460 yuan per tonne on  Wednesday, down more than 3 percent from last week.      China's slowing economy, which grew at its weakest pace in  three years in the second quarter, along with a seasonal lull in  demand during the summer months have pressured steel prices,  prompting mills to curb output.      China's daily crude steel output averaged 1.958 million  tonnes in the first 10 days of July, down 0.4 percent from the  preceding 10-day period, industry data showed this week.         "I don't think any steel mill today can buy iron ore at  current prices and make money. The steel market is so bad. I  don't see any recovery in demand before late August or  September," said another trader in Shanghai.       Stockpiles of five major steel products in China, including  rebar and hot-rolled coil, held by traders had been steady  between 15.4-15.6 million tonnes since June, according to data  compiled by Bank of America-Merrill Lynch.      They are down about 18 percent from this year's peak of 19  million tonnes, although stockpiles have fallen by a much faster  24 percent during the same period in 2011, based on the data.              Shanghai rebar futures and iron ore indexes at 0439 GMT                                                                                            Contract                          Last    Change   Pct Change    SHFE REBAR JAN3                   3837    -27.00        -0.70    PLATTS 62 PCT INDEX              128.5     -1.50        -1.15    THE STEEL INDEX 62 PCT INDEX     128.3     -1.10        -0.85    METAL BULLETIN INDEX            129.08     -1.81        -1.38                                                                                            Rebar in yuan/tonne    Index in dollars/tonne, show close for the previous trading day     ($1 = 6.3702 Chinese yuan)     (Editing by Himani Sarkar)  

No comments:

Post a Comment