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31 Mar 2009
China's Baoshan Iron and Steel Co Ltd, the country's largest steel maker, expects to return to profit in the first quarter of this year after posting a big fourth quarter loss, its president said on Monday. Profits in Chinese steel makers were slashed by high iron ore costs and slumping steel prices in the second half of last year, causing an
overall loss for the industry, which produced more than 500 million tonnes of crude steel in 2008.
"The listed company did not suffer a net loss in the first quarter,
although the industry confronted a very tough market," Fu Zhongzhe told
an online briefing.
Boasteel lost 6 billion yuan ($878 million) in the fourth quarter as
demand for for its steel withered amid the global financial crisis.
Fu said the company had reduced its iron ore stockpiles to a level of
about one-month's consumption, while the company expected to work out
the iron ore which they purchased at the term prices for 2008/2009
fiscal year before April.
Baosteel, which represents Chinese steel mills in annual iron ore price
talks, has cited the slump in domestic steel prices as justification
for more favourable terms from top ore suppliers BHP Billiton, Rio
Tinto and Vale.
"The company is still in talks with the miners, and the China Iron and
Steel Association had raised requirement for the price cut," Xu
Lejiang, Chairman of Baosteel and its state-owned parent company, told
the briefing.
Fu confirmed that the association demanded that term iron ore prices should fall to 2007/08 levels.
That would means a 40 percent cut from the price settled last year, the
biggest annual price fall in history and an end to six years of
consecutive price gains, which boosted prices nearly five-fold during
the period to $91 a tonne.
Source: Reuters