Townsville Bulletin

BHP meets revised target

Big miner tips moderate growth for year ahead

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BHP has reported a rebound in iron ore output in the fourth quarter after a cyclone hit production in March, and forecast modest output growth in 2019-20 amid a surge in prices.

BHP met its revised target for iron ore production, but flagged $US1 billion ($A1.43 billion) in productivi­ty losses for fiscal 2019 in its quarterly production report, flowing from disruption­s to operations across its commoditie­s.

The Anglo-australian miner’s iron ore output fell to 71 million tonnes during the fourth-quarter ended June 30, compared with 72 million tonnes a year earlier.

The figure was below a UBS estimate of 72.6 million tonnes, but up 12 per cent on the March quarter.

Production across its suite of commoditie­s broadly recovered from March, which is typically the weakest quarter due to Australian weather conditions. “Generally speaking, it’s just a little bit softer than we expected, although it’s strong sequential­ly,” said analyst Glyn Lawcock at UBS in Sydney. “If you look at their guidance it’s highlighti­ng that they aren’t really growing their volumes, so that means price is key going into next year.” Miners have benefited from iron ore prices at five-year highs, after a dam disaster in Brazil led to a global shortage of the steelmakin­g ingredient.

Analysts expect some of the windfall profits to be passed on to shareholde­rs when Australian miners report their profits next month.

BHP forecast iron ore production at 273 million to 286 million tonnes for the 2020 fiscal year, a 1.0 per cent to 6.0 per cent increase from 2019 production of 270 million tonnes, which was slightly down from 275 million tonnes for 2018. The iron ore shortage was exacerbate­d after Cyclone Veronica tore down the coast of Western Australia in March, hitting several iron ore export hubs, in a return of more turbulent weather after several moderate years.

BHP was on track with its growth projects, Mr Lawcock noted, after Rio Tinto flagged a cost blowout at its key growth copper project in Mongolia when it reported on Tuesday.

The $US1 billion in productivi­ty losses followed flooding in Queensland that hit BHP’S metallurgi­cal coal operations, as well as changes to its Nickel West mine plan and higher costs in thermal coal, it said. That added to disruption­s mostly at its Australian operations in the first half that included an acid plant outage at Olympic Dam, a fire at its Kalgoorlie nickel smelter, and a train derailment.

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