China's imported iron ore prices dropped by 7.2 percent
year-on-year to reach US$62.7 per ton on average in the first three
quarters, statistics with the China Iron and Steel Association
(CISA) show.
Analysts attributed the decrease to the slowdown of China's
imports of iron ore.
China imported 247 million tons of iron ore in the first nine
months, up a hefty 24.2 percent from a year earlier, but down 7
percentage points in growth rate, and meanwhile, this is the first
time since 2003 that the import growth has dipped under the 30
percent bar, said Luo Bingsheng, CISA's vice chairman.
"The prices are declining because the imports of iron ore are
turning to a moderate growth from a fast growth, which were
influenced by the steady growth of domestic iron ore output," he
told an ongoing international symposium on the iron raw material in
Qingdao, east China's Shandong Province.
In the first three quarters, China produced more than 400
million tons of iron ore, up 37 percent year-on-year, and the
domestic prices have gone below the imported prices since May, CISA
statistics show.
As a result in August, domestic steel businesses purchased iron
ore from domestic mines 2.56 times that in January, statistics
show.
After iron ore prices surged 71.5 percent last year, costing
China -- the world's largest iron ore importer -- an additional
US$570 million, the country has been demanding a bigger say in
setting global benchmark prices.
China has been very active in negotiations with top
international providers Companhia Vale do Rio Doce, BlueScope and
Hammersley Iron. It only reluctantly agreed to a further 19 percent
rise in iron ore prices this year.
The symposium is regarded as a warming up of a fresh round of
international iron ore prices negotiation, which attract great
attention of the world iron and steel industry.
More than 40 Chinese iron and steel companies including
Shanghai-based Baosteel as well as the world top three iron ore
providers Australian BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and Brazilian Vale do
Rio Doce attended the symposium.
But the executives of the foreign iron ore providers declined to
comment on the iron prices next year, only saying that they are
optimistic about China's steel market and iron ore imports. They
also predicted a gap between demand and supply in China.
Lu Jianhua, director of China's Ministry of Commerce's Foreign
Trade Department, did not think imported iron ore prices would
continue to rise, saying that past four straight years of increase
had made mines gain huge profits but left steel businesses earning
little or even suffering losses.
"It is not in the interests of the two sides of demand and
supply," he said.
Lu predicted that China's total iron ore imports for the year
would be around 320 million tons, up 20 percent from a year earlier
but down 12 percentage points in growth rate.
"Chinese steel businesses should actively participate in the
global iron ore pricing and it is also justified for the Chinese
government to pay attention to this, because iron ore is the major
raw material of iron and steel industry, which concerns the whole
of national economy," he said.
(Xinhua News Agency October 26, 2006)
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