National Post

COAL RALLY LIFTS MINERS, BUT CAN THE REBOUND LAST?

- Jesse Riseboroug­h and Thomas Biesheuvel

The surprise surge in coal prices should provide an unexpected profit boost for the world’s biggest mining companies as they navigate a commodity downturn that sapped earnings.

Gains for coking coal, used with iron ore to make steel, accelerate­d in recent weeks and benchmark prices from top producer Australia j umped 9.5 per cent on Thursday, the most since at least 2013. At current prices, that would add almost US$5 billion to BHP Billiton Ltd.’ s underlying earnings before interest, tax, depreciati­on and amortizati­on in the year ending June 30, according to Liberum Capital Ltd.

Coal has more t han doubled this year as China’s production curbs increased its reliance on supplies from other nations. The rally — which Morgan Stanley called a “complete surprise” — is a bright spot for miners still suffering from a plunge in commoditie­s over the past five years. It will also help compensate for a worsening outlook for iron ore, BHP’s main earner, with the firm and a raft of banks expecting prices to retreat by year-end.

“Nobody saw this coming,” Richard Knights, a mining analyst at Liberum Capital Ltd. in London, said by phone. “It’s caught the whole market by surprise. If coal prices stay where they are, thermal and coking, there are huge earnings upgrades to come through in the sector.”

Australian premium hard coking coal reached US$ 173.40 a ton Thursday, the highest in Bloomberg data going back to 2013. The majority of sales are based on quarterly contracts, which were set about 88-percent below the current spot price. Producers should now be better placed to negotiate higher prices for fourthquar­ter contracts.

BHP shares have climbed 34 per cent in 2016, rebounding from a three-year slump. That’s still much less than this year’s fourfold jump for Teck Resources Ltd., the Canadian miner whose biggest source of revenue last year was from coal.

Slowing Chinese demand had led to a global oversupply of the fuel in the past few years, while utilities used less to cut pollution. Chinese coal output is now being curbed because of a new policy restrictin­g working days in mines, according to Liberum.

The doubling in coal this year overshadow­s almost all commoditie­s, with zinc and silver up about 40 per cent and iron ore about 30 per cent. It may take a while for mining companies to benefit from today’s coal price, because most of their sales are based on quarterly contracts, rather than spot rates.

While supply cuts, higher Indian imports and improved steel margins should keep coking coal at US$ 120 to US$ 130 in the near term, there is a risk of an “imminent” pullback given the speed of coal’s advance, BMO Capital Markets said last week.

Others are more pessimisti­c. Prices have been driven higher by supply shortages that should disappear soon, said Kirill Chuyko at BCS Global Markets, Moscow’s largest brokerage. “The global coal price rally is a clear bubble that should burst within two to three months.”

 ??  ??
 ?? GEORGE FREY / GETTY IMAGES ?? The coal rally — which Morgan Stanley called a “complete surprise” — is a bright spot for miners still suffering from the plunge in commoditie­s over the past five years.
GEORGE FREY / GETTY IMAGES The coal rally — which Morgan Stanley called a “complete surprise” — is a bright spot for miners still suffering from the plunge in commoditie­s over the past five years.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada