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31 Jul 2010
China, the biggest buyer of iron ore, should reduce supplies by foreign companies to just one-third of its requirements by 2015 by boosting domestic output and investing overseas, the China Iron & Steel Association said
Imports rose 4.1 percent in the first half from a year ago, while
domestic production surged 17 percent, suggesting China is reducing its
reliance on overseas shipments, Chairman Deng Qilin said at a members
meeting today.
China wants to cut purchases from Vale SA, BHP Billiton Ltd and Rio
Tinto Group, which account for three-quarters of global trade, after
they dropped a 40-year custom of setting annual prices and raised rates
twice this year. Aluminum Corp of China Ltd and Wuhan Iron & Steel
Group are leading an overseas drive by investing in African and
Brazilian mines.
"To boost China's pricing power for iron ore imports and ensure a
healthy development of the steel industry, we must make full use of both
domestic and overseas resources," said Deng, who is also general
manager of Wuhan Steel.
Imports gained 42 percent to a record 628 million metric tons last year,
according to China's customs data. Domestic ore output in the nation
was about 238 million tons at 63 percent iron content, according to HSBC
Holdings Plc.
Counter measures
Aluminum Corp of China yesterday agreed to invest $1.35 billion in the
Simandou iron ore project run by London-based Rio Tinto. Wuhan Steel has
invested in Brazilian miner MMX Mineracao e Metalicos SA.
China should study counter measures against the "oligopoly" of BHP, Vale
and Rio, Shan Shanghua, general secretary of the steel association,
said at the same meeting. The government should introduce measures
encouraging domestic output equal to at least 40 percent of supplies
needed, he said.
Chinese steelmakers will cut production this and next month because of
an overcapacity, Wu Xichun, an adviser to the association and also a
former chairman of the group, said today at the conference.
Prices won't rebound until production cuts match weakening demand, Wu said.
Domestic prices of hot-rolled coil fell for seven straight weeks to July
16, as government measures to curb property speculation damped demand
for steel. Prices have since gained 6.9 percent to 4,159 yuan a metric
ton, according to Beijing Antaike Information Development Co.
Baosteel Group Corp, China's second-biggest steelmaker, had a profit
margin of 11.55 percent in the first five months, according to Wu.
Profit margins at Hebei Iron & Steel Group, the nation's biggest
producer, was 2.77 percent, and 4.78 percent at Jiangsu Shagang Group
Co, Wu said
Source: China Economic Net