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TRADE WARS
Iron ore plunges as China rout hurts commodity markets
By Glenda KWEK
Sydney (AFP) July 9, 2015


Oil prices lift after Chinese stocks rebound
New York (AFP) July 9, 2015 - Oil prices rose Thursday after a spate of losses, as a rebound in Chinese stocks somewhat eased concerns about financial turbulence in the world's biggest energy consumer.

US benchmark West Texas Intermediate for August delivery advanced $1.13 to $52.78 a barrel, after falling 13 percent in five straight sessions.

Brent North Sea crude for August, the global benchmark, finished at $58.61 a barrel, a gain of $1.56 from Wednesday's settlement.

"It's a better day," said Bart Melek at TD Securities, pointing to a 5.8 percent jump in the Shanghai Composite Index.

"There is hope that oil will continue to strengthen a little bit as China restores confidence," he added.

Chinese share prices have fallen 30 percent since June, raising fears for the health of the world's second-largest economy.

The gains on Thursday came after the Chinese government's latest moves to calm the turmoil, including action to stop "major" shareholders -- those holding at least a five percent stake -- from selling their stocks.

Meanwhile, oil traders seemed hopeful that debt-riven Greece would strike a crucial bailout deal with European leaders this weekend.

"Petroleum prices are back on the upside... supported by the latest bout of optimism that Greece might reach a deal on its debt and a lack of clear progress on an Iranian nuclear agreement," said Tim Evans of Citi Futures.

An agreement with Iran would see the West lift punishing economic sanctions that have restricted the country's oil exports.

Iron ore prices plunged to six-year lows Thursday as contagion from China's stocks rout hurt commodity markets, with resource-heavy economies like Australia and Brazil bearing the brunt.

The spot price of the commodity took its biggest one-day hit ever overnight, falling 10 percent to $44.59 a tonne, analysts said, as demand in key market China continues to shrink.

The price represented its lowest level since at least May 2009.

At that level, most Australian miners would be producing at a loss, with the exception of low-cost giants like Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton.

"You've had the perfect storm in terms of globally rising risk premiums and at the same time expectations of China's (economic) recovery are being pushed out," CLSA's head of resources research Andrew Driscoll told AFP.

"It means all commodity markets have faced heavy selling, but particularly those markets where there's no shortage of supply and iron ore is a good example of that."

IG Markets strategist Evan Lucas added in a note that the price of steel -- of which iron ore is a key ingredient -- in China was so weak it was "now cheaper per tonne than cabbage".

Copper jumped as the US dollar slipped, and oil prices were also on the rise, with US benchmark West Texas Intermediate gaining 83 cents to $52.48 a barrel on Thursday, after four days of losses.

Various agricultural commodities, including wheat, soybeans and corn, rose Thursday, boosted by a surge in China's benchmark Shanghai stock index after the government issued more policies to halt the market slide.

Cotton declined, but analysts said the drop was due to an announcement in China -- the world's largest commodity consumer -- that it would sell two metric tonnes from state reserves in July and August, rather than concerns of broader economic weakness.

The slump in iron ore followed the free fall in China's stock market this week even as Beijing worked hard to calm investors.

China has suspended trading in more than half of the country's listed stocks, banned new listings, is probing "vicious short-selling" and enlisted the help of the country's major stockbrokers through a huge stabilisation fund.

ANZ analysts also linked the commodity pressure to the Chinese market, and noted that "while there are some signs of prices stabilising, any sustained recovery in commodity markets is unlikely in the short term".

- Few positive catalysts -

Iron ore is Australia's largest export and government revenue has taken a hit as the price dives.

The ore price had already been declining in recent months on the back of increased supply by miners such as BHP and Rio, as well as softer growth in Chinese demand.

China, the world's second-largest economy, has been battling weaknesses in industrial production and trade. Gross domestic product (GDP) growth slowed to 7.0 percent in the first-quarter of this year -- the worst quarterly result in six years.

Australia's iron ore exports were forecast to increase by four percent this year to 748 million tonnes as suppliers ramp up output from the Pilbara in Western Australia, the nation's Department of Industry and Science said last month.

Supply is also expected to be boosted by initial production from Hancock Prospecting's massive Roy Hill mine.

At the same time, Brazil's iron ore exports were forecast to rise by seven percent this year to 390 million tonnes on the back of infrastructure expansions and increased production, the report said.

The department lowered its forecast for iron ore prices to $54.40 a tonne for this year and $52.10 in 2016 as China's output of steel weakens.

"Without some positive (Chinese) economic growth to indicate some strong underlying demand, or material supply disruptions, it's difficult to see what the near-term positive catalysts are going to be," Bell Potter's senior resources analyst David Coates told AFP.

"It's definitely going to make life tough, particularly for the junior (miners)," he added.

"Iron ore just seems very well supplied and demand looks vulnerable."


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