Friday 29 June 2012

Rise in Baltic Dry Index and rising Asian commodities demand


Last Updated : 29 June 2012 at 17:15 IST
Source :Commodity Online

SINGAPORE (Commodity Online): The recent gains in Baltic Exchange’s main sea freight index and China’s increased infrastructure spending raises hopes for a sustainable rebound in commodities in Asian region.

On Thursday, Baltic Exchange’s main sea freight index, which tracks rates for ships carrying dry commodities rose to 994 points and rising further to 998 points on Friday. It gauges the cost of shipping commodities such as iron ore ,cement, grain, coal and fertilizers some of which are much in demand in Asian markets.

China news agnecy,Xinhua reported that new yuan-denominated loans will hit 1 trillion yuan (159 bn US dollars) in June, as the nation steps up stimulus measures to spur demand. The new loans in June will be close to 1 trillion yuan driven by speedier approvals for infrastructure projects, expanding construction of low-income housing and export rebound last month.

Meanwhile, Reuters reported that rates for large dry-bulk carriers on key Asian freight routes are expected to edge up next week due to a revival of trading activity from China, but ample vessel supplies will limit gains.

Benchmark capesize fixture rates from Australia to China rose to a two-week high of $6.746 a tonne on Wednesday from $6.492 last week, supported by renewed freight demand. The market has rebounded about 4 percent since hitting a 16-month low of $6.492 on June 19.

Rates for the Brazil-China route edged up to a three-week high of $17.518 a tonne from $17.279 last week. The market remained within striking distance of a 16-month low of $17.168, reached on June 18.

GRAINS-US corn rebounds, notches 15 pct gains this week


Fri Jun 29, 2012
* New-crop corn rises for five out of six sessions

* Dec. corn up almost 15 pct this week on U.S. drought

* Wheat up nearly 20 pct in 2 weeks on supply fears

* Coming Up: USDA's June stocks/acreage report; 1230 GMT
By Naveen Thukral
SINGAPORE, June 29 (Reuters) - Chicago corn bounced back on Friday, rising for five out of six sessions as a severe drought in the U.S. Midwest curbs yields of what was once estimated to be a record-large crop.

Soybeans added 0.7 percent after three consecutive sessions of losses, while wheat was little changed as investors squared positions ahead of a U.S. Department of Agriculture report on stocks and acreage.

"The general mood is very bullish as the Midwest drought is expected to worsen and result in lower yields," said Ker Chung Yang, commodities analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore. "The market is speculating lower output and it is pre-positioning before the report."

The new-crop December corn is on track for a record weekly gain of about 14 percent and a monthly rise of almost 22 percent after baking Midwest weather ignited a market rally.

Front-month wheat has climbed almost 20 percent in two weeks, the biggest two-week rally since August 2010, sparked by concerns over supplies from the Black Sea region and tracking corn higher. The most-active November soybean contract has added 2.6 percent this week, building on last week's rally of nearly 5 percent.

On Friday, Chicago Board of Trade December corn rose 0.4 percent to $6.35 per bushel by 0331 GMT, while November soy added 0.7 percent to $14.13-1/4 a bushel. September wheat was unchanged at $7.46 per bushel.

The USDA will release its quarterly grain stocks and annual acreage estimates on Friday and investors at the Chicago Board of Trade evened positions ahead of the reports.

Sizzling temperatures and a lack of rain are taking a heavy toll of the U.S. corn crop, with 12 analysts polled by Reuters expecting a yield 5.4 percent lower than the USDA's current figure.

The average estimate of the U.S. 2012 corn yield among analysts surveyed was 157 bushels per acre, 9 bushels less than the USDA's forecast of a record-high 166 bushels.

Don Keeney, a senior agricultural forecaster with Cropcast, a division of MDA EarthSat, said the midday U.S. weather model was a little wetter for Indiana and Ohio for this week than the morning forecast but was "not excessively wet by any means, instead of 1/4 of inch it gives them a 1/3."

Severe and moderate droughts were worsening in the southern Ohio River Valley, according to the weekly U.S. Drought Monitor released early Thursday.

About half of the corn in the United States, the largest producer and exporter of the No. 1 global grain, is likely to be in its most vulnerable phase of pollination by the end of next week and the dry conditions could cut production by the day.

U.S. wheat futures have been supported by concerns over lower output in the Black Sea region, even though the market was little changed on Friday.

The combined wheat crop of Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan will fall to 78.9 million tonnes this year, down 22 percent from 2011, with the biggest effect on yields from winterkill and spring drought in the Black Sea wheat powerhouses of Russia and Ukraine, a Reuters poll of 19 traders and analysts showed.

  Prices at  0331 GMT
  Contract        Last    Change  Pct chg  Two-day chg MA 30   RSI
  CBOT wheat     746.00     0.00  +0.00%    -0.80%     669.58   75
  CBOT corn      635.00     2.75  +0.43%    +0.32%     564.07   71
  CBOT soy      1413.25     9.75  +0.69%    +0.09%    1351.11   66
  CBOT rice      $14.97    $0.06  +0.44%    -0.27%     $14.49   53
  WTI crude      $79.16    $1.47  +1.89%    -1.31%     $84.57   39
  Currencies                                              
  Euro/dlr       $1.259   $0.010  +0.82%    +0.71%
  USD/AUD         1.014    0.008  +0.78%    +1.35%
  Most active contracts
  Wheat, corn and soy US cents/bushel. Rice: USD per hundredweight
  RSI 14, exponential

(Reporting by Naveen Thukral;Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

Larger US corn, soy area may not ease drought worry


Fri Jun 29, 2012
* Big US corn, soy area may buffer drought losses-Traders

* Smallest June 1 corn stockpile since 2004 expected

* Bad weather could bring third year of tight corn supply

* USDA to release stocks, planting data at 8:30 a.m. EDT
By Charles Abbott
WASHINGTON, June 29 (Reuters) - American farmers likely sowed far more soybean seeds than they had originally intended this year and planted the most corn acreage in 75 years, the U.S. government is expected to say on Friday in a report that has been overshadowed by a deepening drought in the Midwest.

The U.S. Agriculture Department's acreage and quarterly stockpile reports, normally among the most important of the year for estimating supplies from the world's top grower, may be set aside by traders who fear that intense heat and a lack of rain is damaging corn stalks every day. Those conditions also may have dissuaded some farmers from planting soybeans on recently harvested wheat fields.

Farmers likely decided to plant much more of all three major crops than initially estimated in the USDA's March survey, while corn stocks likely shrank by the fewest bushels in three years, according to a survey of analysts. Under normal conditions, the largest corn sowing since 1937 would produce a record crop, ending two years of tight supplies.

But the sudden switch from a balmy spring to hot, dry weather in the Corn Belt has wiped roughly 1 billion bushels, or 7 percent, off the potential size of the crop, according to traders, though a record crop is still within reach.

With the threat of further damage to come, some say news of bigger acreage will not change the tense mood.

"Weather will still dictate prices as we go into the weekend," said one Chicago futures trade. New-crop December corn has surged 14 percent this week.

Planting of soybeans was expected to be 2.2 percent larger than the USDA's first estimate after a near 30 percent rally in springtime prices encouraged farmers to sow idled acres or cut back secondary crops like barley.

The extra soy acres did not come at the expense of corn, according to analysts, who estimated that corn acres would be marginally higher thanks to unusually mild spring weather. Wheat is expected to be 1.4 percent larger than in March.

The USDA surveyed 70,000 growers in early June for its annual report on plantings, which covers two dozen principal U.S. crops, from cotton to wheat.

It also asked growers and commercial warehouses how many bushels of corn, wheat and soybeans were in their bins.

BRACED FOR ROILING...

For the past two years, USDA's June estimate of corn stocks has roiled markets, fuelling criticism of its data and methods. Last year, corn futures prices fell by 10 percent, a record decline, when USDA said supplies were far larger than expected and a bumper crop was on the way.

In a poll, traders said they expect the corn stockpile to be the smallest for June 1 since 2004, a sign of the squeeze on supplies, although the decline in stock levels from March 1 was the smallest in three years as demand ebbed due to depressed ethanol margins and stiff export competition.

Forecasts call for the dry weather to stretch into the summer, risking a third successive year of below-normal corn yields, the longest such string since 1995-97.

Soybean supplies also are tightening. With average yields, the crop would be the third largest on record but barely enough to avoid shortages, experts say.

The early season drought revived memories of the one in 1988, which was the worst Midwest drought since the Depression. The 1988 drought peaked in July with 40 percent of the country in extreme or severe drought. Corn yields were 29 bushels below normal, a bigger drop than current analysts predictions.

"Comparisons to the 1988 drought are not quite direct," said meteorologist Matthew Rosencrans of the U.S. Climate Prediction Center. He said the 1988 drought was centered in the northern U.S. Plains and Midwest while this year it runs from the central Plains to the eastern Corn Belt.

"The interesting aspect with this drought is its rapid onset," said Rosencrans.

On average, the acreage report issued at the end of June tends to overstate corn plantings and understate soybean area, according to the USDA. Its margin of error on corn acreage is 1.3 percent and the margin of error for soybeans is 2 percent.

(Reporting By Charles Abbott; Editing by Bob Burgdorfer)

Falling yield hopes overshadow key acreage data


28th Jun 2012, by Agrimoney
Macquarie cut its estimate for the US corn yield for the second time in a week, with Rabobank downgrading its forecast too, thanks to the dry weather which is overshadowing the release of data normally one of the highlights of crop investors' year.

Macquarie, which last Friday downgraded its forecast to 156.5 bushels per acre, cut the figure further to 154 bushels an acre, citing "the poor weather conditions across the southern Corn Belt".

Rabobank also reduced its forecast to 154 bushels per acre, down 3 bushels per acre from its last estimate, confirmed last week, and the US Department of Agriculture figure of 166 bushels per acre.

The revision is the latest in a series of downgrades blamed on hot and dry US conditions deemed a threat to corns' sensitive pollination period, fears which sent Chicago's best-traded December corn contract up a further 1.6% on Thursday to $6.43 a bushel – taking gains this week above 16%.

Indeed, the weather scare threatens to turn into a sideshow - for corn at least - the USDA crop plantings and stocks reports on Friday which investors have been anticipating since the initial sowings briefing in March.

Yield vs area

Investors expect Friday's data to show a small increase, of 230,000 acres, to 96.1m acres in US corn sowings, compared with the March report.

However, even a bigger revision, of perhaps 1m acres, may not be enough to drag investors from their focus on the US weather outlook, Morgan Stanley said, terming yield hopes "a bigger driver".

"We expect that the market will continue to focus more on weather and the national corn yield in coming weeks, than on a circa 1m-acre swing in corn planted area," Morgan Stanley analyst Hussein Allidina said.

"Even 97m planted acres, 1.1m acres higher than the USDA's current estimate, would leave the 2012-13 stocks-to-use ratio below 10% if yields do not top 159 bushels an acre — a growing possibility."

The stocks-to-use ratio is a much-watched metric in commodity markets, measuring the availability of raw material and therefore the pressure on buyers to pay up to secure supplies.

Double-crop question

Where the acreage data may have more impact is on the prices of soybeans, for which their vulnerable development period still some weeks away, meaning the yield threat does not yet loom so large.

While the market has been factoring in sowings of 75.6m acres, 1.7m acres above the USDA's initial forecast, it was "doubtful" this level would be reached, given the setback that dryness has posed to seedings of so-called double-crop soybeans, planted on land cleared by the winter wheat harvest, Mr Allidina said.

Macquarie said that even though an early winter wheat harvest and high soybean prices had given growers "both the ability and incentive to plant a record-large double-crop soybean area, we don't see it happening".

"Dry conditions are restricting the farmer's ability to plant," the bank said, estimating double-crop soybean area at 5.2m acres, a rise of 8.9% year on year but well below the record of 7.1m acres set four years ago.

Time lag

Wherever the data do come out, there must be some question over their validity, given the continuing harsh weather, Societe Generale said.

"The survey period occurred during the first two weeks of the month. Since that time, conditions have worsened even further, and estimates may still overstate actual acreage in Friday's report," SocGen analyst Christopher Narayanan said.
Still, the unexpected knock-on effects of the drought mean that even the idea of disappointing double-crop soybean acreage may have an offsetting factor, with some growers whose corn crop has been lost seeing the oilseed as an alternative for late sowing.

Mike Mawdsley at broker Market 1 said: "I have heard of disking corn and planting soybeans in south west Indiana," a state where corn crops are in particularly bad shape.

At FCStone, commodity risk manager Jaime Nolan Miralles highlighted "growing reports of producers in the eastern Corn Belt abandoning corn for crop insurance with intentions of planting to soybeans".

Corn prices 'could test record highs' - Rabobank


28th Jun 2012, by Agrimoney
Corn prices could yet test their record high, meaning the rally has another 25% to go, if the US sees more of the dry weather which has sent its condition into a "nosedive" Rabobank said, cutting its yield forecast.

There was still potential for corn crops to recover, even after their worst start to the season since the drought year of 1988, when the yield plunged 29%.

In 1992 too, crops suffered a poor start into June, only to recover rapidly to post what was then a record yield, of 131.4 bushels per acre.

However, "we do not consider this a true comparison", Rabobank said, noting forecasts for further hot and dry weather ahead, as corn approaches the vulnerable pollination phase.

Yield downgrade

Soil moisture deficits built up over the last month, during which most of the crop has received less than three inches of rain, "are unlikely to be rebuilt" before pollination ramps up to a peak  in mid-July.

Forecasts are projecting "only scattered amounts" of rain, of 0.5-1.0 inches, in the last week of June, a period during which temperatures "are forecast to be severely hot, with maximums reaching 100 degrees Fahrenheit over almost all of the Corn Belt", the bank said.

The bank, cutting its yield forecast by 3 bushels per acre to 154 bushels per acre, forecast that US corn inventories would end 2012-13 below the psychologically important 1bn-bushel market for a second successive season.

"Our production estimates are now 33m tones below current US Department of Agriculture estimates – equivalent to South America's entire corn export estimate in 2012-13."

Record high price?

And on prices, the bank forecast that futures may "reach $7.50 a bushel in coming months, and even threaten previous record highs of $7.99 a bushel for December contracts" unless conditions improve.

"We believe that weather concerns will continue to drive prices."

The December lot spent most of Thursday in positive territory before closing down 0.2% at $6.32 ¼ a bushel in Chicago.

'Very dangerous market'

Rabobank's analysis contrasted with warnings from some other brokers against following the market higher after gains of more than 15% already this week in the December lot.

"This market is now very dangerous. The bull rubber band is stretched," US Commodities said, noting impact of high prices in lowering demand from ethanol plants, which are seeing a series of temporary shutdowns, and weak exports.

US weekly export corn sales, at less than 300,000 tonnes, below market estimates, and the more than 750,000 tonnes achieved in the same week last year.

However, Rabobank pointed to physical evidence already of yield damage, with corn widely reported to be pollinating "at lower heights than normal, which on its own is enough to stunt yield development."

Separately, Purdue University crop sciences professor Emerson Nafziger said that it was "difficult for short [corn] plants to form the complete canopies that plants need for maximum yield".

In part, this was down to lower leaf area, and an inability to "form the complete canopy needed to intercept nearly all of the sunlight".

Soyabean futures jump on hopes of lower output


SURESH P. IYENGAR, THE HINDU BUSINESS LINE
MUMBAI, JUNE 29:
Soyabean futures on the National Commodities and Derivatives Exchange Ltd (NCDEX) gained 1.6 per cent to Rs 3,928 per quintal on expectations of lower output in this kharif season.

The below normal rainfall and drop in area under soyabean cultivation may impact production this year. Besides, the dry weather prevailing in the US may hit the crop yield.

Sowing of kharif oilseeds has begun, however, the pace is much slower due to weak monsoon progress.

Area covered under oilseeds is about 3.13 lakh hectares, down 32 per cent as of June 21. Area covered under soyabean stood at 13,600 hectares compared with 50,000 ha last year.

The minimum support price for soyabean was hiked by 30 per cent to Rs 2,200 a quintal in 2012-13. Higher MSP may lead to increase in acreage, but the crop output will depend on the progress of monsoon.

As per the Solvent Extractors' Association of India, the domestic export of oil meal in May increased 8.60 per cent to 351,791 tonnes from 323,907 tonnes logged in the same period last year.

However, the total export of oil meal between April-May was down 10 per cent to 752,218 tonnes.

CBOT Soyabean settled 0.34 per cent lower on Thursday on reports that the acreage has risen by 2.2 per cent in the US. The US Department of Agriculture reduced the crop condition ratings for corn and soyabean to the lowest since 1988.

Biggest Coal Takeover No Easy Flip For Tinkler: Real M&A


By Soraya Permatasari and Angus Whitley - Jun 29, 2012
Bloomberg
An electrician-turned-dealmaker is poised to make the biggest bet ever on coal mining in Australia just as prices of the fuel tumble.

Nathan Tinkler has held talks with banks to fund a bid for Sydney-based Whitehaven (WHC) Coal Ltd., according to people familiar with the matter, after his initial approach was rejected on June 13. The 36-year-old multimillionaire is seeking to acquire the 79 percent he doesn’t yet own of a company already trading at more than 38 times estimated earnings, making Whitehaven the most expensive coal mining company globally with a market value of more than $1 billion, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Tinkler may now need to pay a 35 percent premium, valuing Whitehaven at A$5.6 billion ($5.6 billion), Macquarie Group Ltd. said, in the largest acquisition of an Australian coal company on record, the data show. While he would be buying a company that is targeting a fivefold increase in coal production by 2016, prices for the commodity are mired in their worst slump since the financial crisis. Tinkler may need to weather four more years of a bear market as the start of mining projects in Australia and exports from Indonesia and Colombia further depress prices for coal, Standard Chartered Plc. said.

“To do a deal like this, you have to be a lot more bullish on coal prices than the market is right now,” David Cotterell, a Sydney-based analyst at Nomura Holdings Inc., said in a phone interview. “Unless the market’s wrong, you could be waiting a long time to get your money back.”

Whitehaven fell as much as 4.6 percent today before rebounding and rising almost 2.7 percent. The shares were up 2 percent at A$4.19 apiece at 2:27 p.m. in Sydney.

Bank Talks

Tim Allerton, a spokesman for Tinkler, declined to comment on his plans for Whitehaven, as did Kate Kerrison, a spokeswoman for Whitehaven.

Whitehaven on June 13 said it rejected a “conditional and incomplete” proposal related to a possible buyout led by Tinkler Group Pty. Tinkler held talks with banks including Barclays Plc, JPMorgan Chase & Co. and UBS AG to finance a bid, two people with knowledge of the matter, who asked not to be identified as the details are confidential, said this month. A bid may come as soon as next week, the Australian Financial Review reported on June 26, without saying where it got the information.

Tinkler’s offer came less than six weeks after he sold Brisbane-based Aston Resources Ltd., which controls the Maules Creek steelmaking coal project, and another company called Boardwalk Resources Pty, to Whitehaven. The A$2.5 billion deal, announced in December, made Tinkler the largest shareholder in Whitehaven. His 21 percent stake, valued at A$1.1 billion at the end of December, is worth A$874 million after a 22 percent drop in Whitehaven this year.

’A Crime’

Acquiring the rest of Whitehaven would give Tinkler control of five mines in eastern Australia already in production, two under development and an additional five that are being explored, according to a May presentation from the company. The miner produces a mix of coking coal, used for steel making, and thermal coal, bought by power generators to make electricity.

Whitehaven, which put itself up for sale in October 2010 only to rebuff the bids it received as too low, traded as high as A$7.30 a share in April 2011. The stock ended yesterday at A$4.11 a share.

“It will be a crime for Whitehaven to be bought at these prices,” Andrew Pedler, an analyst at Wilson HTM Investment Group in Brisbane, said in a telephone interview. “Whitehaven is significantly undervalued.”

Even after Whitehaven slid 44 percent from its all-time high, the company is valued at more than 38 times analysts’ earnings estimates for the fiscal year ending this month, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. That’s more than any other global coal company with a market value exceeding $1 billion, and compares with a median of 11 times for the group, the data show.

Coal Prices

Tinkler is making his approach even as analysts project an oversupplied market will keep the price of thermal coal, which accounts for 69 percent of Whitehaven’s output, depressed.

At $83.10 a metric ton, thermal coal at the Australian port of Newcastle is already down 25 percent this year through June 22, according to IHS McCloskey, a coal data provider. The Asian pricing benchmark is poised for its worst quarter since the aftermath of the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc.

With U.S. coal-fired power generators increasingly switching to natural gas and freeing up more of the nation’s coal for export, and output in Australia, Indonesia and Colombia increasing, global coal export capacity will jump 85 percent by 2017, from the current limit of 1.2 billion metric tons, according to Standard Chartered.

Newcastle Coal

More than 60 projects in eastern Australia are set to produce an additional 100 million tons of coal by the end of 2017, compared with Australia’s current annual coal exports of 300 million tons, Nomura said in a May 24 report.

Newcastle coal, which stood at $192.50 a ton in July 2008, will fetch $90 a ton in 2017, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc. That matches Nomura’s “long-term” forecast for the fuel. The price of coking coal, which is set in negotiations between suppliers and steelmakers, fell to $206 a metric ton for the quarter ending June 30, from a peak of $330 a year before.

“There’s an awful lot of downward pressure on coal pricing,” said Peter Arden, senior research analyst at Ord Minnett Ltd. in Melbourne. “Returns will not be as good as they have been recently,” he said, referring to the profitability of running a coal producer.

To win over shareholders, Tinkler may have to offer A$5.53 a share, said Andrew Sullivan, a Sydney-based analyst at Macquarie. That would represent a 30 percent premium to the shares’ 30-day moving average before the first approach, Sullivan said in a June 19 note. It would also be a 35 percent premium to yesterday’s close, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Relative Value

A bid at that level would value Whitehaven at about A$5.7 billion ($5.7 billion), including net debt of A$126 million. That would surpass the $4 billion acquisition of Macarthur Coal Ltd. by Peabody Energy Corp. (BTU) last year, making the takeover the largest of an Australian coal miner, the data show.

At that price, Tinkler would be paying almost 25 times Whitehaven’s operating income of A$233 million for the 12 months through December, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Global coal mining companies with more than $1 billion in market value trade at a median enterprise value of 9.3 times operating income. In 15 takeovers of Australian coal miners over the last five years, the median multiple paid was 19.7 times, the data show.

‘Cost Blowouts’

Tinkler would be acquiring a company that expects to boost annual output to 25 million tons by June 2016, from a projected 5 million tons in the year ending this month. Whitehaven is also planning to increase coking coal to 60 percent of output by then, from 31 percent now, according to a May presentation. Both targets are dependent on the expansion of Whitehaven’s mines and the availability of rail and port capacity.

“Companies often make these production-growth forecasts, which can often prove more difficult to achieve than they initially expect,” Gareth James, an analyst at Morningstar Inc. with a hold rating on Whitehaven, said in a telephone interview. “There’s plenty of time between now and then for development delays, cost blowouts, that kind of thing.”

Already, Whitehaven has pushed back the start of production from its Maules Creek mine to early 2014, from mid-2013, according to analysts at UBS and Credit Suisse Group AG. In a May 31 note, Credit Suisse described the delay as “a big disappointment,” and said the cost of developing the mine may be as much as 10 percent higher than initially estimated because industry costs have risen since a feasibility study on the mine was completed in July 2011.

Horse Breeding

Tinkler, who moved to Singapore from Australia this year, built his near-$1 billion stake in Whitehaven in a series of transactions since 2006. He sold his house that year to help buy a A$30 million coal lease in Queensland, only to sell the asset to Macarthur Coal for cash and shares a year later.

In 2008, Tinkler sold his Macarthur Coal stake to steelmaker ArcelorMittal (MT) at a profit of about A$445 million. He then bought Maules Creek from Rio Tinto Group for A$480 million in August 2010.

Seeking funds to develop the project, Tinkler sold shares of Aston Resources the same month, to raise A$400 million. In December he signed the agreement to inject Aston Resources assets into Whitehaven. He also owns metal-mining projects, infrastructure investments, a horse-breeding operation, and the Newcastle Knights, a rugby league team.

Buying Whitehaven may now require holding onto a mine for longer than any Tinkler has ever owned.

“At the end of the day someone has to make those assets work better to generate better returns than they have previously,” Ord Minnett’s Arden said. “For the next year or so it’s going to be very difficult to make much money. He really needs to buy some time right now.”

Mongolian Mining Bets China Will Double Coal Imports


By Michelle Yun - Jun 29, 2012
Bloomberg
Mongolia Mining Corp. (975) is betting there’s enough demand from China to support the construction of an $800 million railway that will double export capacity to the nation that counts Mongolia as its biggest coal supplier.

Expanding transportation links between the adjacent countries “will improve the position of Mongolia as the leading coking coal supplier to China,” Battsengel Gotov, chief executive officer of MMC, as the company is known, told reporters in the Mongolian capital of Ulan Bator.

Mongolia, the world’s fastest growing economy, overtook Australia as China’s biggest coking coal supplier last year, exporting 20 million metric tons of the raw material used to make steel. MMC is building a 250 kilometer (155 mile) rail to add 30 million tons of export capacity direct to China.

“There’s still room for everybody in Mongolia” to mine and sell commodities, Gotov said from the company’s head office.

MMC shares fell 1.9 percent to HK$4.13 as of 2:09 p.m. in Hong Kong, compared with a 2.3 percent gain in the benchmark Hang Seng index. The stock has dropped 29 percent this year as coal prices declined.

Chinese demand has been curbed by slower global growth and coking coal prices have fallen as much as 15 percent in the first half from the previous six months, Gotov said.

Prices, which fell to $206 a metric ton in the quarter ending June 30, may rebound to an average $225 a ton this financial year, based on the mean estimate of 10 analysts, steelmakers and mining companies surveyed by Bloomberg in April. Anglo American Plc (AAL) settled coking coal prices at $225 a ton for the third quarter.

Boosting Output

MMC plans to boost output by about 41 percent to 10 million tons this year from its Ukhaa Khudag at the Tavan Tolgoi deposit and then to 15 million tons in 2013. It will use about half the export capacity of its planned railway and will lease the other half to mining companies, Gotov said. Mongolia will assume 51 percent ownership of the rail after 19 years.

The rail, due for completion in 2015, will halve the time it takes to transport coal by road from Tavan Tolgoi to China to between two hours and three hours, he said.

Mongolian Elections

Mongolians, a third of who live below the poverty line in a nation of 3.1 million people, went to the polls yesterday. The opposition Democratic Party is leading after early counting though no party has a clear majority, President Tsakhia Elbegdorj said in an interview today.

State-owned miner Erdenes Tavan Tolgoi, or Erdenes TT, is developing the East Tsankhi part of the 60-billion-metric ton Tavan Tolgoi deposit, of which MMC’s share accounts for about 4 percent. Erdenes TT is seeking to sell shares to raise $3 billion to finance new rail, road, and power infrastructure.

Mongolia has held talks with companies including Peabody Energy Corp. (BTU), OAO Russian Railways, and China’s Shenhua Group to develop the West Tsankhi part of Tavan Tolgoi.

MMC uses some of its production to power an 18-megawatt plant to supply electricity to the mine and surrounding town. Roughly 30 kilometers away, MMC is also developing Baruun Naran mine, which it acquired last June for $464.5 million from a unit of Kerry Holdings Ltd.

“Once the railway is completed, it will also be seen as the next profit-generating center,” Gotov said.

China’s coal power projections set to jump


Sinoship, [29/06/12]
Shanghai: Any thoughts that China will dramatically shift away from coal as its primary source of electricity generation in the coming years have been dispelled in a new report out today.

New analysis from Frost & Sullivan finds that China is expected to have unprecedented growth with about 945 GW and 1,040 GW of total coal-fired capacity in 2020 and 2030, respectively.

"China, India, and the rest of Asia are the key focus areas for coal-fired investment in the coming decade," explained Frost & Sullivan Industry Director Harald Thaler. "Strong projected electricity demand growth and low production costs make the region attractive for both domestic and global participants."

Aim-listed company to export coal and generate electricity in Mozambique


By: Keith Campbell
29th June 2012
Mining Weekly
British junior miner Ncondezi Coal has confirmed that it plans to start production from its Ncondezi coal project, in Mozambique, in 2015, and to start construction of a coal-fired power plant, adjacent to the mine, in the same year.

Ncondezi is listed on the London Stock Exchange Aim. The project is located in the coal-rich province of Tete, close to Vale’s Moatize and Rio Tinto’s Benga operations.

The definitive feasibility studies (DFSes) for both the mine and the power station are nearly finished, the company reported last week. The mine DFS is on schedule for delivery to Ncondezi in the next (third) quarter and for publication in the fourth quarter, while the power station DFS is set for completion and publication during the third quarter.

The intent of the company is to produce coal for both export and to feed the power plant.
The coal used as power plant feedstock will not be of export grade. The electricity generated will be fed into the existing Mozambique power grid, with the country’s demand for electricity rising, and could even be sold to South Africa.

The Ncondezi deposit has a defined Joint Ore Reserves Committee-compliant resource of 4.7-billion tons of thermal coal. The mine will be developed in phases, with phase one having an annual production capacity of four-million tons, half of which will be for export, while the other half will be feedstock for the power station. Phase two will increase output to 12-million tons per year (Mtpy), of which 5 Mtpy will be for export and 7 Mtpy to feed the power station. This latter phase will be dependent on financing and infrastructural development in Mozambique. Ncondezi will be an openpit operation and the company believes that the deposit can sustain a long-life mine at a production rate of more than 10 Mtpy.

The power station will also be built in phases. Phase one, to be completed in 2017, will see the construction of a 300 MW to 600-MW-capacity power plant. Phase two will expand this capacity to 1 800 MW.

“We are focused on a phased development approach for the project in order to deliver a financeable solution which maximises returns and offers an achievable path to production,” said company CEO Nigel Walls at the release of the project update last week. “The power component of the project DFS will enhance overall project economics by providing revenue from nonexport-grade products at a minimal additional cost.

“Ncondezi is also well placed to capitalise on the significant potential for power generation in Southern Africa,” he added. “Our power strategy is closely aligned with the Mozambique government’s stated policy of in-country beneficiation, as it consolidates its position as a leading regional power player.”

The export coal will be targeted at markets in Asia, particularly China and India. Over the past two years, these two countries have become increasingly important thermal coal importers. “The long-term fundamentals for the seaborne thermal coal market remain strong as demand growth is driven by the build- out of power generation in Africa,” he highlighted. “[We] have a saleable product that is attractive to Asian customers.”

In terms of getting the coal from Ncondezi to the coast for export, the company will be able to make use of the upgraded Sena railway line to Beira, which is planned to have a capacity of 20 Mtpy by 2017, and the new (Vale-owned) railway link across Malawi to link up with the (also Vale-owned) Mozambique line to Nacala (which will be upgraded). The Malawi–Nacala line will have a capacity of between 18 Mtpy and 30 Mtpy and will start shipping coal in 2015.

Edited by: Martin Zhuwakinyu

Coal India Ltd gets NTPC's de-allocated coal mines


28 JUN, 2012, PTI
NEW DELHI: The Coal Ministry has given three de-allocated mines, including two of NTPC, to CIL and asked it to appoint mine developers to begin the production from these blocks at the earliest.

The Prime Minister's Office (PMO) recently asked the Coal Ministry to fast-track the process of taking back captive blocks from the companies which have not developed them within the stipulated time, and giving them to Coal India Ltd (CIL).

Recently, show-cause notices were also issued to 58 allocates, including RPower, Tata Power, JSW for delaying the production from the blocks.

The country is facing acute coal shortage, hitting hard the power sector and moves are afoot to ensure that the production is enhanced.

"The Coal Ministry has given three deallocated mines a couple of days ago to CIL. It has also asked the PSU to appoint mine developer, operator (MDO) to expedite the development of these blocks," a top official in the ministry told PTI.

The three mines given to CIL are NTPC's Brahmini and Chichro Patsimal coal blocks in Jharkhand and West Bengal Power Development Corporation's (WBPDCL) East of Damagoria (Kalyaneshwari) coal mine, the official said.

In May last year, the Coal Ministry had deallocated Brahmini and Chichro Patsimal coal blocks. Both the blocks were allocated in January 2006 to be jointly operated by a 50:50 joint venture between NTPC and CIL.

The Coal Ministry in the letter last year had stated that it is "of the view that the allocatee company (NTPC) is not serious about development of coal blocks and (the government) has therefore decided to deallocate Brahmini and Chichro Patsimal coal blocks allocated to NTPC".

The Damogoria block was allocated to WBPDCL for its proposed expansion of power plants and setting up of a new 1,000 MW thermal power plant in West Bengal.

WBPDCL had earlier surrendered this mine to Coal India citing its difficulty in developing it. Consequently, the mine was taken back.

Birla Corporation obtains 'exploration' licence for limestone mines in Ethiopia


28 JUN, 2012, ANURADHA HIMATSINGKA, ET BUREAU
KOLKATA: MP Birla group flagship Birla Corporation has obtained 'exploration' licence for limestone mines in Ethiopia. The company has also applied for coal mines exploration licence over there and hopes to receive the same shortly.

Addressing shareholders at the company's 92nd annual general meeting held in Kolkata on Thursday, Birla Corp chairman Harsh V Lodha said the company has floated a wholly owned subsidiary in Ethiopia christened Birla Corporation Cement Manufacturing Plc to take up exploration of limestone and other minerals as well as set up cement and other captive power plants.

Meanwhile, the company is also looking at acquiring coal mines abroad but nothing has firmed up yet as the market is too volatile.

With regard to its Chanderia operations, Lodha said the company may seek legal opinion against the stay on limestone mining over there. According to a Jodhpur high court judgement, no mining activities and blasting can take place within 10 kms from Chittorgarh fort wall. He said work at Chanderia has been hit due to this directive from court. The Chanderia incident has cost the company Rs 120 crore, he said.

Incidentally, Birla Corp shareholders' put all the resolutions including re-appointment of Harsh V Lodha as the company's chairman, to vote at the end of the general body meeting.

SAIL-led consortium may finalise pact with Afghanistan by July-end


28 JUN, 2012, PTI
NEW DELHI: The SAIL-led consortium may sign the final pact with Afghanistan by July-end to develop a steel plant, a thermal power plant and necessary infrastructure with total investments of over $ 10 billion, Afghanistan's mines minister Wahidullah Shahrani said here today.

"Right now, we are in the final stage of contract negotiation. Hopefully...by the end of July, we will be signing the agreement," Shahrani told reporters at the Delhi Investment Summit on Afghanistan organised by CII.

He said the agreement would be signed in Kabul and the total investment by the Indian consortium would be over $ 10 billion.

The Afghan Iron & Steel Consortium had emerged as the preferred bidder for mining exploration rights at three iron ore mines at Hajigak, having an estimated reserve of 1.7 billion tonnes.

SAIL has the maximum of 20 per cent equity stake in it, while NMDC and RINL hold 18 per cent each. Among private players, JSW and JSPL hold 16 per cent each, while JSW Ispat and Monnet Ispat & Energy hold 8 per cent and 4 per cent stake, respectively.

He said Afghanistan will ensure the supply of coking coal, an important raw material for steel making. The Indian consortium had placed the raw material security as a pre- condition for setting up the steel plant.

"Everything has been included in the negotiation. Any raw material that will be needed for making steel including coking coal would be given to them," Shahrani said.

SAIL Chairman C S Verma had earlier said the consortium proposes to set up of a 6.12 million tonnes per annum (mtpa) steel plant in Afghanistan in two phases of 3.06 MT each, subject to Afghanistan government making available linkages for coking coal and limestone in requisite volumes.

There is also plan to build a 800 MW power plant in two phases of 400 MW each to cater to the operations of the mine and steel plant. As part of building necessary internal infrastructural support, the consortium plans to build 200 kms each of rail, road and transmission line network for the mine and steel project.

"The total investment by AFISCO on all of the above is estimated to be US$ 10. 8 billion in phases, subject to negotiations," Verma had said.

Sterlite, JSPL, Monnet eager to join PSUs for Afghan mines


28 JUN, 2012, PTI
NEW DELHI: Sterlite Industries, Jindal Steel and Power and Monnet Ispat and Energy have evinced interest in joining hands with four PSUs, including Hindustan Copper (HCL), to form a special purpose vehicle to bid for gold and copper mines in Afghanistan.

"Three parties are exploring opportunities to participate with us so that one bid from India as a country is placed. We have not yet taken a final decision (on their inclusion). We will be taking it shortly," HCL Chairman and Managing Director Shakeel Ahmed told reporters at the Delhi Investment Summit on Afghanistan.

The three companies -- Sterlite Industries, Jindal Steel and Power and Monnet Ispat and Energy -- would possibly form a joint venture, if included, with four state-run firms -- HCL, Nalco, MECL and SAIL, he said.

The Afghanistan government has invited bids from interested parties for developing four copper and gold mines, spread across the war-torn country. Its Mines Minister Wahidullah Shahrani, while speaking at the function earlier in the day, said a total of 40 companies including the world's majors have evinced interests for developing these mines.

The unique public and private sector joint venture model for securing raw material assets abroad has already tasted success and more recently in Afghanistan itself with a seven- member public-private sector consortium, led by SAIL, bagging mining rights in three Hajigak iron ore mines.

The consortium has plans to invest over $ 10 billion for a steel plant, a power plant and developing other infrastructure.

It has already went past the first hurdle by being shortlisted and now would place the financial bid, which would be submitted shortly.

Ahmed said there are separate dates for submitting bids for different deposits. However, for the first one, final bid is to be submitted by the middle of next month.

Iron Ore-Spot prices fall, mill appetites weak


Fri Jun 29, 2012
* Weak industrial profits underline slower growth

* Steel prices down 6 pct in April-June

* Australian, Brazlian cargo prices fall by $1/T
By Ruby Lian and Fayen Wong
SHANGHAI, June 29 (Reuters) - Spot prices for iron ore cargoes to China fell on Friday as buying interest from steel mills remained tepid, with data showing a fall in industrial profits for a second straight month underlining slower domestic growth.

Steel demand in China, the world's largest producer and consumer, has been waning since early April as Europe's debt crisis and a property tightening campaign have slowed economic growth, dragging down steel prices by 6 percent over April to June.

China is expected to grow at the slowest pace in more than three years this quarter and industrial profits fell for a second straight month in May on slackening domestic and external demand.

"Traders sealed deals (to buy iron ore) but have found it difficult to sell on market as mills are not buying," said a Shenzhen-based iron ore trader.

Prices for Australian and Brazilian cargoes to China fell by $1 per tonne on Friday, according to Beijing-based industry consultancy Umetal.

Benchmark iron ore with 62 percent iron content .IO62-CNI=SI dropped half a dollar to $134.90 per tonne on Thursday, the lowest since June 14, data from the Steel Index showed. It fell more than 8 percent over the April-June period.

Still, there are hopes Beijing will do more to boost the world's second-largest economy, which could lift steel and iron ore demand later in the year.

"Some traders are quite positive on the steel market in the second half of this year, and the market should not be as bad as the first half," the trader added.

However, any gains in iron ore and steel prices could be curbed by a supply glut in China, which has about 900 million tonnes of annual steel capacity but may only be able to absorb 700 million tonnes this year.

Steel output in China has jumped to more than 2 million tonnes on a daily basis since April, but has started to fall since late May. Daily steel output was estimated at 1.971 million tonnes from June 11 to 20, down 1.4 percent from the preceding 10 days, industry data showed.

The most active rebar contract for October delivery on the Shanghai Futures Exchange fell 0.42 percent to 4,068 yuan ($640) per tonne, after falling to a more than two-week low of 4,040 yuan per tonne.

  Shanghai rebar futures and iron ore indexes at 0722 GMT

  Contract                          Last    Change  Pct Change                      
  SHANGHAI REBAR*                   4068    -17.00       -0.42
  PLATTS 62 PCT INDEX             136.25     -0.50       -0.37
  THE STEEL INDEX 62 PCT INDEX     134.9     -0.50       -0.37
  METAL BULLETIN INDEX            136.04     -0.69       -0.50

  *In yuan/tonne                                                                    
  #Index in dollars/tonne, show close for the previous trading day
  ($1 = 6.3575 Chinese yuan)

(Reporting by Ruby Lian; Editing by Richard Pullin and Chris Lewis)

Hindustan Zinc to invest Rs 2,000 cr in Rajasthan mines


SURESH P. IYENGAR, THE HINDU BUSINESS LINE

Contracts awarded to South African, Chinese firms

MUMBAI, JUNE 28:
Hindustan Zinc plans to invest about Rs 2,016 crore ($360 million) to improve mining operations at its Rampura Agucha and Sindesar Khurd (SK) zinc mines in Rajasthan.

The contracts have been awarded to South Africa-based Shaft Sinkers and two Chinese companies NFC (China Nonferrous Metal Industry’s Foreign Engineering & Construction Co Ltd) and CCN5C (China Coal 5 Construction Co Ltd).

Mr Akhilesh Joshi, Chief Executive Officer, Hindustan Zinc, said the money required for the project will be funded through internal accruals.

UNDERGROUND MINING

The Vedanta Group company had cash and cash equivalents of about Rs 18,000 crore as of March 31, 2012. The projects are scheduled to be completed in 2017. Mining at Rampura Agucha is being done from the open pit. This can be in operation till 372 metres below the surface.

But the mineral reserves and resources below the open pit operating level are to be extracted by suitable underground mining methods, explained a company spokesperson. The company zeroed in on a vertical hoisting shaft with crushing system after a detailed haulage assessment.

It was found that this method would be most economical to handle underground ore. The hoisting shaft will also act as a ventilation intake to bring fresh air to the mine production area, he said.

The shaft will reach a depth of 950 metres and will be 7.5 metres in width.

There will be two silos — one for storing ore and one for waste rock. The world’s largest zinc producing mine, in Rampura Agucha, has proven reserves 110.4 million tonnes (mt).

About 6.15 mtpa of ore is currently extracted from the mine.

CONTRACT TO NFC

Mining at the silver content-rich SK mine has gone up from 0.3 mtpa to two mtpa in last six years. It has reserve of 81.3 mt. The shaft at this mine will be 7.5 metre wide and about 1050 metres deep.

NFC has been awarded the $111-million contract which includes engineering contract of $5 million for five years.

The company produced 240 tonnes of silver in FY12. The country’s largest silver producer, Hindustan Zinc hopes to rank among top 10 silver producers when its output increases to 500 tonnes by FY14.

It has set up a silver refinery of 518 tonnes per annum to process the silver extracted from this mine.

Aditya Birla Group plans to shut part of UK aluminium foil mill, relocate it to India


29 JUN, 2012, M V RAMSURYA, ET BUREAU
MUMBAI: The Aditya Birla Group plans to shut part of its aluminum foil making mill in the UK and relocate the plant to its unit near Nagpur. The move is aimed to crack the whip on unviable units in the European market, which are currently grappling with oversupplies and high energy costs.

The Bridgnorth facility of Novelis, which is a subsidiary of group flagship Hindalco Industries, employs about 300 people and makes foil packaging products for the food and beverages industry.

It has been facing problems due to overcapacity in European foils space and increased competition from manufacturers in low-cost countries that has affected its profitability.

Novelis is the world leader in aluminum rolling and produces nearly 20% of the world's flat-rolled aluminum products used in consumer goods, cars and aircraft.

"Every factory has to be profitable and has to justify its existence. There can be no subsidies," said Hindalco managing director Debu Bhattacharya, who is also vice-chairman of Novelis.

He didn't specify on Bridgnorth's financials. Part of the Bridgnorth facility will be relocated to Hindalco's unit at Mouda near Nagpur where foils for packaging for food will be made. This is the second time that Hindalco has shut down a European unit and relocated the plant to India.

In 2011, the company shifted plant and machinery from its beverage can-making facility at Rogerstone in the UK to Hirakud in Orissa. "There are advantages in doing this. I save on time as it takes 2-3 years to build a similar plant in India. I also save on cost. I need cash now. I don't want to spend on equipment right now," said Bhattacharya.

Novelis is the world's largest maker of cans. The move is also similar to costcutting measures adopted by yet another Indian major Tata Steel, which has a large presence in the UK through Corus.

Between 2010 and 2011, the Jamshedpur-based steelmaker mothballed units in the UK, which cut about 1,500 jobs. Although highly unpopular, the measures by Tata Steel and the Aditya Birla Group have been widelybelieved to be necessary as general slowdown has affected European markets and have turned some units unviable.

Global aluminum majors, including Alcoa, have closed down a significant part of their production, almost 12% of the total capacity, due to high energy costs. The closures have already affected supplies with Indian producers commanding a $220 premium over LME prices.

On June 27, Novelis reported strong operating results in FY12 despite tight market conditions globally. Net sales, at $11.10 billion, were a 5% increase compared with $10.60 billion last year, mainly due to higher conversion premiums and an increase in average aluminum prices.

Novelis also showed a record operating profit per tonne of $371. Shipments were, however, lower due to economic slowdown and de-stocking. The group has also outlined large investment plans for Novelis and will put in more than $1 billion to increase presence in growth markets such as Korea, China, Brazil and India.

The company has completed acquisition of 31.30% of the outstanding stake in its Korean subsidiary for $344 million that will raise Novelis' ownership to 99%. In China, Novelis will invest $100 million in a unit to make aluminum sheets for cars.

Parent Hindalco said it has raised Rs 4,500-3,000 crore through a debenture issue in April and an additional Rs 1,500 crore through a similar instrument early this week to fund growth plans.

Uruguay To Build Iron-Ore Seaport Eyeing Chinese Investment


By Lucia Baldomir - Jun 28, 2012
Bloomberg
Uruguay’s government is going forward with plans to build its first deepwater port which it wants to use as a platform to begin exporting iron-ore to China.

Construction of the port on the country’s Atlantic coastline will begin in 2014, according to a decree signed by President Jose Mujica and published on his website today expropriating land where the port will be built.

China has expressed interest in investing in the port, Vice President Danilo Astori said over the weekend following a meeting in Montevideo with Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao.

Minera Aratiri since 2007 has been developing a project to export an estimated 18 million metric tons a year of iron-ore that the Montevideo-based company says would convert Uruguay into the world’s eighth-largest producer of the mineral.

Aratiri says it would create 1,500 permanent jobs and contribute $1.4 billion to Uruguay’s $39 billion economy over the life of the 20-30 year project.

Aratiri is controlled by Zamin Ferrous, a closely held miner which also is developing iron-ore projects in Brazil.

Iron ore piles up at Paradip port, awaits shipment


SANTANU SANYAL, THE HINDU BUSINESS LINE
KOLKATA, JUNE 28:
More than a million tonnes of iron ore, mostly fines, are lying accumulated in Paradip port, awaiting shipment.

The exporters are pinning hope on better days but keeping their fingers crossed. They are not sure if and when will the present situation turn for better.

REASONS

It is not simply the slump in global demand which is causing concern; the restrictions imposed by the Odisha Government on mining and transportation of the ore too, it is felt, has contributed to the present situation.

In the first quarter of this fiscal (April-June 2012-13), total iron ore exports through the port were a little more than three lakh tonnes as compared to 2.6 million tonnes in the same period of last year.

The major exporters were Rungta Mines, Essel Mining and the Jindals.

However, the crisis situation on the iron ore front has thrown up prospects of new kinds of traffic.

IRON ORE PELLETS

Iron ore pellets, both imports and coastal shipments, hold out a big promise.

So far in the current fiscal, the port has handled 1,24,000 tonnes of pellets including 55,000 tonnes on account of Bhusan Steel alone, 23,000 tonnes of direct reduced iron and 1,48,000 tonnes of hot briquettes, all imports, and none of these items had existed last fiscal.

From its newly commissioned pellets plant at Paradip, Essar has started coastal shipments of pellets.

The initial trial consignment of 5,600 tonnes was followed by a bigger shipment, totalling 43,000 tonnes so far.

The Steel Authority of India Limited too has started “importing” pellets by way of costal shipments and an estimated 26,000 tonnes have been handled at the port so far.

Poor demand, iron ore supply problems hit steel billet market


Sadananda Mohapatra / Bhubaneswar Jun 29, 2012,
Business Standard
Poor demand from producers of long steel and raw material supply problems have choked the steel billet market in the past couple of months. Many manufacturers have either regulated production or cut prices on a bleak demand scenario.

“The reason for the price fall is simple. There is no demand for finished products in the market and it is affecting billet prices. In the past month, we had to reduce prices by Rs 1,000-1,500 per tonne,” said Rajendra Sachdeva, owner of Ghaziabad-based billet maker Shivam Steel.

Billet prices currently rule at Rs 35,000-36,000 per tonne, depending on grade and size. It is a semi-finished, long steel product, mainly sold by smaller steel plants to larger ones for producing steel meant for construction. Construction activities in the country have received a setback due to muted earnings growth and high interest rates.

“There is no demand for intermediate steel products and industrial production is not encouraging. There is no demand for sponge iron, too, as most steel companies have curbed production,” said the marketing official of a state-based billet producer. Buyers have also restricted billet buying due to the current monsoon season, when construction activity normally dissipates, he added. Spot prices of iron ore fines in the international markets came down by three to four per cent recently on poor demand. In Odisha, the largest producer of iron ore in India, prices are expected to fall in the July-September quarter, industry officials said.

However, steel industry sources said the price fall in billets was temporary, as the constraints in iron ore availability would not allow producers to reduce prices below a point.

“In Odisha, most of the state-owned and private mines are shut due to lack of statutory clearances, thereby creating shortage in raw material supply. As a result, intermediate steel producers have cut production,” said P L Kandoi, president of the All Odisha Steel Federation.

From the latest available data, India’s Industrial production in April grew by only 0.1 per cent due to a fall in capital goods and manufacturing output. Capital goods output declined 16.3 per cent against growth of 6.6 per cent in the same month last year. The manufacturing sector grew by just 0.1 per cent, much lower than the 5.7 per cent in April 2011.

Goa to auction iron ore dumps piled up in govt properties


PTI
PANAJI, JUNE 29:
The Goa Government will auction the low grade ore piled up in its properties over last several decades causing environmental hazards, a senior official said today.

The new Goa Minerals (Prevention of Illegal Mining Transportation and Storage) Rules, 2012 will amend the laws to empower the State Government to sell the iron ore dumps, which are usually of low-grade, lying in the government-owned lands.

The Principal Secretary (Mines), Mr R.K. Verma, confirmed that the policy would be framed by mid-July but refused to divulge the details.

He said the draft policy would be put up for public scrutiny before it takes final shape. The new rules, which will be ready within three weeks, will repeal and replace the 2004 rules, sources said.

The heaps of ore are sometimes washed away during rains thereby polluting the nearby water bodies, a senior official said.

Goa has 750 million tonnes of ore in the form of rejects scattered across the state. The ore, which had no buyers, has suddenly got the value after demand from China increased since 2005. These rejects are usually used to blend with the high grade ore.

The State Government has imposed a ban on handling these dumps since September 2011, to control the illegally extracted ore, which was funnelled under the guise of moving the dumps.

The State Mines and Geology Department has already begun an exercise to identify the quantum of dumps, which are initially estimated to have been storing 750 million tonnes of ore.

The Chief Minister, Mr Manohar Parrikar, has insisted that even if someone stakes claim on the dumps in the government property, he should be fined exorbitantly before allowing him to lift the ore, the sources said.

Baltic shipping index up on higher capesize rates


Thu Jun 28, 2012
By Koustav Samanta
June 28 (Reuters) - The Baltic Exchange's main sea freight index, which tracks rates for ships carrying dry commodities, rose on Thursday, as higher capesize rates offset the continued softer performance in the panamax segment.

The overall index, which gauges the cost of shipping commodities such as iron ore, cement, grain, coal and fertilizer, rose 6 points or 0.61 percent to 994 points.

The main index, which factors in the average daily earnings of capesize, panamax, supramax and handysize dry bulk transport vessels, has fallen about 42.8 percent this year.

"Bunker prices have stabilized at lower levels and the freight market has seemed to have stabilized, with the exception of the Atlantic, which is dismal. The usual large operators have continued to turn over their fleets at stable rates," ship broker Fearnleys said in its weekly note.

The Baltic's capesize index climbed 2 points or 0.17 percent to 1,184 points.

"While Capesize rates could improve a lot in percentage terms, this would likely not do much to help the many distressed dry bulk companies," RS Platou Markets analyst Frode Morkedal said in a note to clients.

Average daily earnings for capesizes, which typically transport 150,000 tonne cargoes such as iron ore and coal, were up $53 at $3,879.

Bids for spot iron ore cargoes remained weak and few on Thursday as sluggish steel prices in top market China gave mills less reason to stock up on the raw material.

Iron ore shipments account for around a third of seaborne volumes on the larger capesizes, and brokers said price developments remained a key factor for dry freight.

The Baltic's panamax index fell 1.33 percent on Thursday, with average daily earnings down at $7,712.

Analysts said fewer cargoes out of the U.S. Gulf and South America with increased tonnage availability was hurting Panamax rates.

Earnings for panamaxes, which usually transport 60,000 to 70,000 tonne cargoes of coal or grains, have dropped about 41.3 percent this year.

"We maintain a modest view on dry bulk for 2012 and see Supra/Handymax increasing their relative and absolute performance within the dry bulk segments," Arctic Securities analyst Erik Nikolai Stavseth said in a note to clients.

Average daily earnings for handysize and supramax ships were up at $10,399 and $13,034, respectively.

"We believe the Handies are supported by the upcoming Black Sea grain boom while the Supramaxes are benefitting from higher volumes of coal from Indonesia to other Asia and strong demand from the South American soybean season," analyst Morkedal said.

(Additional reporting by Nallur Sethuraman in Bangalore)

BUNKER PRICES : 29.06.2012