Tuesday, April 27, 2010

China Steelmakers Sign Quarterly Deals - Reports

Low Iron Ore Stocks Force Steel Mills' Hand



Reports from China suggest that some Chinese steelmakers have signed private pricing contracts on a quarterly basis with global iron ore suppliers.


The China Economic Times cites an unnamed executive at China’s largest steel mill, Hebei Iron and Steel Group, as saying that several of the company's subsidiaries had no choice but to accept the quarterly pricing proposal as their ore reserves would last last until mid-May.

"Some steel mills, including us have accepted the new quarterly pricing system, based on the previous three months' average spot prices," a sales executive from another large steel mill told China Daily.

"The China Iron and Steel Association (CISA) has issued a document asking steel mills not to sign iron ore contracts with the three big miners until the final negotiations are completed. But we cannot stop production and hence most of the steel mills have signed contracts privately like they did last year," he added.


The Shanghai Securities Journal suggested on Monday that Chinese steelmakers were basing these deals on Vale's agreement last month with Japanese and Korean mills that resulted in a 96.4% rise on last year's benchmark to about $110 a metric ton.

Official sources have denied the reports.

Some analysts estimated that the uptrend in iron ore prices would be short-lived, as most traders have started to show pessimism on market prospects.

The three global miners - Vale, Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton - broke the 40-year tradition of selling iron ore on an annual contract basis this year opting instead for a quarterly pricing system.



1 comment:

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