UPDATE: Brazil's Vale Sees Iron Ore Price Stable For 2-3 Months
December 07 2011 - 4:21PM
Dow Jones News
Brazilian miner Vale SA (VALE, VALE5.BR) says iron ore market
prices will stay stable for the next two to three months, but could
then start to rise.
The rainy season which is now beginning in Brazil, the typhoon
season in China and lower exports from India should reduce supplies
in the medium term, which may start pushing prices up, Vale
director Jose Carlos Martins told analysts and investors in London.
Prices could also rise if China's central bank loosens its monetary
policy, Martins said.
Spot market iron ore prices for delivery into China hovered at
around $180 a ton for more than a year, but slumped in early
October, and reached a low of $116 a ton in early November, Martins
said.
Prices rebounded to $141.50 a ton on Tuesday, and Martins said
they are likely to remain in the range of $140 to $150 per ton for
the next 60 or 90 days.
More than half of Vale's iron ore contracts now reflect the
actual average price for the current quarter, which is about 20%
below the price calculated under the previous system, which was
based on a "lagged" average quarterly price, Martins said.
Martins said that this explains reports that Taiwanese
steelmaker China Steel Corp (CISEY, 2002.TW) has obtained a 20% cut
in iron ore prices this quarter, as the Asian firm is moving to the
new contract system.
Vale is in negotiations with steelmaker ArcelorMittal (MT,
MT.AE)), the world's largest steelmaker and Vale's single biggest
customer, over the switching to the new pricing contracts, the
executive said.
Around 20% of Vale's sales are still on the old quarterly
"lagged" system, including customers in Japan and Korea, Martins
said.
According to the director, the new iron ore pricing system,
which is closer to spot market pricing, means the market has had to
sacrifice the predictability it enjoyed with the previous annual
benchmark and quarterly contract systems.
"It's a tough negotiation but we're really flexible," Martins
said. However, customers which opt to move to the new pricing
system based on current market price averages won't have the option
to switch back if market conditions change, he said.
Some analysts have said steelmakers may be tempted by the new
system because iron ore prices have been falling, but companies
could be in for a shock if ore prices start to rise again.
"It's a one-way ticket--if you go for it you can't come back,"
he said.
-By Diana Kinch, Dow Jones Newswires; 55-21-2586-6086;
diana.kinch@dowjones.com