Business Standard

INDIA’S SHARE OF CHINA MARKET

The rise in demand for iron ore offers hope to exporters, who will have to compete hard to win back the market they lost in the wake of the mining ban

- KUNAL BOSE 2012-13 2013-14 2014-15 2015-16 2016-17

Why should Indian iron ore exporters be excited that China’s manufactur­ing sector did better in June than experts suggested? The simple answer is, the principal destinatio­n of this country’s exports of iron ore, mostly fines is China. In a major surprise, China’s official manufactur­ing purchasing managers’ index (PMI) for June was up to 51.7 from 51.2 in the previous month. This is against Reuters poll forecast for 51.

China’s June PMI scaling unexpected high has been supported by both rises in new export contracts and improvemen­t in domestic demand. Prices for both segments improved for the first time since December. This shows downward price pressure for producers of manufactur­ed goods has begun to ease. Of particular relevance for our iron ore exporters or for the peer community in Australia and Brazil is the sub-sector Chinese steel industry’s index, which though eased to 54.1 in June, was well above cut off point of 50 that signals expansion.

Many, however, rightly have some reservatio­ns about the official PMI since it covers the large companies, mostly operating in the public sector. The signals about the economy emerging, therefore, may not necessaril­y be authentic. This will not be said about the privately compiled Chinese Caixin manufactur­ing PMI where the poll based on responses from about 430 purchasing managers is well representa­tive of medium and small units. Here, too, in the private Caixin survey, the PMI at 50.4 was at a three-month high of 50.4, rising from an 11-month low of 49.6 in May. Like in official PMI, Caixin PMI beat Reuters poll forecast for 49.5.

The two indexes are definite pointers to rises in consumptio­n of all ingredient­s such as iron ore and metallurgi­cal coal by the Chinese steel industry, which has half the share of global production of the metal. What the indexes say about the working of steel mills in China also hold good for aluminium where the country makes Iron ore exports , ~ crore more than half the world’s silvery white metal. In both iron ore and bauxite, the main raw materials for steel and aluminium making, the country is heavily import dependent.

China consumes over 70 per cent of the world’s seaborne iron ore estimated at 1.4 billion tonnes (bt). As it is using more and more ore of foreign origin, the domestic production of the mineral shrank progressiv­ely to about 125 million tonnes (mt), converted to the standard 62 per cent iron (fe) from very poorly fe enriched locally available ore. Precisely for the cost involved in washing and beneficiat­ion to make the mineral ready for use in blast furnaces, iron ore production in China makes business sense only when the mineral commands very high prices. In 2016, China’s ore imports at 1.024 bt were up 7.5 per cent from a year earlier. Imports of 444.52 mt in the first five months of 2017 have also remained ahead of last year’s correspond­ing period.

RK Sharma, secretary general of Federation of Indian Mineral Industries (FIMI), says decanalisa­tion of iron ore exports in mid-1996 created ideal condition for India to make the best of surge in Chinese ore imports since 2000. The high points of Indian ore production of 218.55 mt and exports of 117.37 mt were in 200910. But then giving in to sustained highpitche­d lobbying by steelmaker­s that the resource, fines or lumps, must not be exported and kept for value addition locally in future, New Delhi in two phases raised export duty on fines to 30 per cent in December 2011 from 5 per cent in February 2011. The move highly resented by China made India origin fines globally uncompetit­ive.

As if relentless waves of resource nationalis­m that hit Indian iron ore industry were not enough, it faced many court related production restrictio­ns and ban on exports from mines in Karnataka. The inevitable by way of exports collapsing to 4.50 mt in 2015-16 happened. The sector was in disarray. Mining companies sank deep into the red. Thousands of jobs were lost. Revenues for the government from the sector sank. Finally, in the Budget for 2016-17, New Delhi extinguish­ed export duty on both fines and lumps with fe content below 58 per cent. Helped by the concession, Indian exports climbed to 28 mt last year, which, however, were nearly 90 mt less than the 2009-10 peak.

Indian exporters will have to compete hard to win back the market it has lost. The global ore market is facing a glut, thanks to supply coming from newly developed properties such as Roy Hill’s 55 mt capacity operation in Pilbara region in Australia, Anglo American’s Minas Rio and the biggest of them all Vale’s S11D property in Brazil. On top of all this, will come the investment by Anglo-Australian Rio Tinto to develop its Koodaideri iron ore deposit in Western Australia. The deposit is likely to have potential to supply 70mt of ore a year. China is the reason for the world’s big resource groups to commit billions of dollars to open new mines and expand the ones in operation.

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