ADVERTISEMENT

Iron Ore Extends Epic Sell-Off as Rout Drives Futures Below $90

Iron Ore Extends Epic Sell-Off With Retreat Back Into the $80s

Iron Ore Extends Epic Sell-Off as Rout Drives Futures Below $90
Stackers stand next to piles of iron ore at Vale SA’s Teluk Rubiah Maritime Terminal in Lumut, Perak State, Malaysia (Photographer: Charles Pertwee/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Iron ore has yet to find a bottom, extending a brutal sell-off on rising concern Chinese demand will weaken this half as supplies rebound. That blow adds to trade-war headwinds as investors shun risk assets.

Futures in Singapore sank into the $80s a ton, while the contract in Dalian hit the lowest since May. On Tuesday, Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. warned there’s potential for mainland demand to soften this half compared with the first six months. That’s just the latest red flag after a run of indicators from rising port holdings to sinking mills’ profitability that foreshadowed the market’s swoon.

“Supply-and-demand drivers have been tilting to a bearish stance for weeks now -- the fall was in the making and we only needed a trigger,” Marex Spectron Group analyst Hui Heng Tan said, referring to the U.S-China trade conflict. The recent weakening of the yuan, which hurts the purchasing power of mills already facing weak margins, has sparked the decline, he said.

Iron Ore Extends Epic Sell-Off as Rout Drives Futures Below $90

The steel-making commodity has gone into freefall as the U.S.-China trade war hurts investors’ appetite for raw materials, at the same time that iron ore’s fundamental drivers weaken. This week, the China Iron & Steel Association said it expected price declines to continue as mainland consumption falters. The sudden retreat has driven futures and spot prices into bear-market territory.

“Mills in China are reportedly reluctant to increase iron ore stockpiles given the weak demand backdrop,” Commonwealth Bank of Australia said. “Demand concerns reflect the U.S.-China trade tensions,” including Washington’s recent designation of Beijing as a currency manipulator, the bank said in a note.

On the Singapore Exchange, ore for September lost as much as 7% to $86.68 a ton, and traded at $87.80 at 3:18 p.m. local time. Most-active prices are set for a sixth daily decline, the worst run this year. On the Dalian Commodity Exchange, futures sank as much as 5.1%.

Mining stocks remained under pressure, with Fortescue falling 3.3% in Sydney. In London trading, Rio Tinto Group dropped as much as 2.1% to the lowest since March and BHP Group declined 1.1%.

On Wednesday, China’s central bank set its daily currency reference rate marginally stronger than 7 a dollar. Earlier this week, the mainland currency breached that key psychological level, stoking criticism from U.S. President Donald Trump and roiling global markets.

Among the recent iron ore market developments:

  • Fortescue flagged weaker second-half demand, although Gaines cautioned that “it will certainly still be up year-on-year.”
  • Roy Hill Holdings Pty is aiming to lift shipments to a run rate of 60 million tons a year, Chief Executive Officer Barry Fitzgerald said.
  • Iron ore prices are expected to drop in a volatile fashion as mainland steel production is seen falling, the China Iron & Steel Association said in a monthly analysis.

To contact the reporter on this story: Krystal Chia in Singapore at kchia48@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Phoebe Sedgman at psedgman2@bloomberg.net, Jake Lloyd-Smith, Keith Gosman

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.