China’s economic recovery falters
Iron ore has been on a downtrend for almost two months. Its price on the Singapore Exchange fell to a year-to-date low of $94.20/t last week, down more than 20% from its year-to-date highs and is now hovering below the key $100/t level.
Prices climbed above $130/t in February amid bets of a revival in steel demand in leading consumer China following the end of the strict Covid-19 lockdowns.
Although China last month reported annual quarterly GDP growth of 4.5%, ahead of expectations – and much faster than the 2.9% for Q422 – there are concerns about whether the pace of growth can be sustained. China’s manufacturing activity slowed in April, with the Purchasing Managers’ Index falling from 51.9 in March to 49.2 in April, a warning signal to the Chinese economy. This followed three straight months of growth since the start of 2023.
The growth in the construction sector, which accounts for about half of Chinese steel demand, has also been slower than anticipated. New property starts in March were down 29.1% compared with the same period the previous year.
Meanwhile, consumer inflation in China dropped close to zero in April, and its weakest pace in two years, while producer prices fell further into deflation, adding to concerns over a weak demand recovery in the country.
China iron ore imports slow down
Amid lower steel consumption from China, iron ore imports have also been under pressure this year. Chinese purchases of iron ore slumped to a 10-month low in April, in a sign of waning demand.
China imported 90.44 million tonnes of iron ore in April, down more than 100 million tonnes in March and the least since June 2022, customs data show. Iron ore inventories have also been falling. Total iron ore stockpiles across ports in China are down 11% year-on-year at 129.2m tonnes. China’s iron ore port inventory is a key indicator that reflects the supply and demand balance, as well as the safety net and imbalance between the iron ore supply and the steel mill demand.
With the peak construction season coming to an end and with the expected demand recovery not meeting expectations, there is little upside for steel output and iron ore demand recovery in the short to medium term.
Supply from majors ramps up
The supply side has been firm so far this year. Rio Tinto, the world’s biggest iron ore producer, reported a better-than-expected 15.4% jump in Q1 iron ore shipments from Western Australia, a record for the quarter, as production at its Gudai-Darri mine ramped up. Its Pilbara operations produced 79.3 million tonnes of iron ore in Q1 of 2023, 11% higher than the Q1 of 2022.
Also, Vale SA reported a 5.8% year-on-year increase in Q1 iron ore production due to stronger performance at S11D. The company produced 66.77 million tonnes of iron ore during the first three months of 2023.
Meanwhile, BHP has maintained its iron ore production guidance at between 249 million to 260 million tonnes in the full year after reaching a record 191.7 million tonnes iron ore production year-to-date, with the March quarter contributing 59.8 million tonnes.
Government scrutiny could cap prices
Sharp price movements in iron ore have drawn scrutiny and warnings from regulators. The National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC) said last month that it would closely monitor iron ore market dynamics and take steps to limit price hikes. Since the start of the year, the NDRC and other authorities have been enhancing the collaborative supervision and regulation of the iron ore market and have cracked down on price gouging, excessive speculation, and illegal activities.
Previously, government interventions to calm the markets have included subduing trading and ordering steel capacity cuts. If we see similar measures used again, this could add further downside pressure to our view.
We believe the short-term outlook remains bearish for iron ore, with sluggish demand from China suggesting that prices should trend lower. We expect prices to average $100/t in Q4 and $106/t in 2023, and prices will remain volatile as the market will continue to be responsive to any policy change from the Chinese government.