MXR is identified in the Mineweb article as the cheapest stock in the list.
The article is primarily about iron ore and coal ( MXR iron ore royalty deal with Flinders) but the MXR inclusion I presume is because of the Narndee base metals project with MXR's large tenement holdings in Western Australia.
ENERGY
FRONTIER INVESTING
Megatrends: iron ore and coking coal
The investment version of a benevolent tsunami is again building up in the form of dozens of iron ore stocks on the move.
Author: Barry Sergeant
Posted: Tuesday , 02 Mar 2010
JOHANNESBURG - -
For some months now, the most noticeable positive net portfolio flows among global resources have been directed to the broad classification of iron ore stocks, followed closely by nickel miners, and certain classifications of coal miners. By now, there should be no surprise as to the heat that continues to gather around these stocks. In Chinese waters, spot prices for iron ore have moved up to around the USD 140/tonne level, compared to contract prices trading roughly 50% lower.
There are increasingly numbers of estimates and forecasts that contract iron ore prices will be raised by up to 50% this year. Coking coal, a natural bedfellow to iron ore, and a highly specialised but bulk market, is also running up the price curve. China remains the world's No 1 miner of iron ore and coal, but has become a net importer of both, with coal going into that mode just last year.
Nickel, a bedfellow downstream for processing into stainless steel, is back on the radar screen after radical, fundamental, changes in the market that saw prices completely collapse in the second half of 2007. Nickel pig iron is back, a product of Chinese smelters that use tropical laterite ores, typified by that available at Acoje in the Philippines. The ore is gifted limonite (usually grading 47% to 59% iron, 0.8 to 1.5% nickel, along with trace cobalt).
Outside China, significant nickel production capacity has been curtailed or shut down in the past two years, allowing for development of a new equilibrium in supply-demand. Nickel prices continue to rise; the best of breed are already back in the money. Australia's Western Areas, which owns two of the world's highest grade nickel deposits in Flying Fox and Spotted Quoll, recently reported a 209% increase in interim revenues for the six months to 31 December 2009. Operating cash flow increased massively to AUD 50.4m from AUD 3.8m in the comparable 2008 period.
But nickel remains a relatively small base metal. The big money is in seaborne iron ore, which has established itself over the past seven or so years as the world's most profitable mining franchise. Brazilian supergroup Vale increased iron ore sales, including pellets, from USD 3.5bn in 2000 to USD 22.2bn in 2008. Sales fell after demand dropped in the first half of last year, and after contract prices fell sharply in the second half, to USD 14.2bn as a whole for 2009.
Vale put it so earlier this year: "Chinese iron ore imports in 2009 reached an all-time high figure of 627.8 million metric tons, up 41.6% on a year-on-year basis, driven by steel production growth and the increasing reliance on imported iron ore".
Contract iron ore prices
USD per dry metric ton unit
Rio Tinto
2007
2008
Change
2009
Change
Yandicoogina Fines
0.8042
1.4466
79.9%
0.9700
-32.9%
Pilbara Blend Fines
0.8042
1.4466
79.9%
0.9700
-32.9%
Pilbara Blend Lump
1.0264
2.0169
96.5%
1.1200
-44.5%
Vale's volume of iron ore and pellets sold in 2009 reached 247mt, against 296mt in 2008, a decrease explained by the significant fall in iron ore demand during the first half of 2009. These numbers can be compared with iron ore sales, including pellets, of some 145mt in 2000.
The megatrend is summated by Vale: "In light of the increasing deterioration in quality of [Chinese] internally produced iron ore and the modernization of the Chinese steel industry, requiring higher quality raw materials, the share of imported iron ore in apparent domestic consumption rose from 15% in 1985 to 25% in 1995, and to 50% in 2005, reaching 72% in 2009".
As for coal, China became the world's largest importer of coal in 2009. On Vale's market intelligence, China in 2009 imported 104mt of coal, against net exports of 4.6mt in 2008. Given the increasing demand from China and India for thermal coal, the Pacific market has been increasingly tight, Vale remarked earlier this year, against a still weak Atlantic market.
The market scenario for Chinese coking coal is similar to iron ore. Vale puts it so: "There is robust demand growth derived from a continued steel production increase. On the supply side, coal fields are moving inland while steel mills are increasingly concentrated in coastal areas and requiring high quality coking coal in the face of a decline in the quality of limited coal reserves. As other countries are running steel mills at increasing rates of utilization, the market for coking coal is expected to become tighter in 2010".
Immaculate timing for new entries to seaborne iron ore would have been around seven years ago. In 2003, Australia's Metal Group acquired Allied Mining & Processing. Going beyond substantial tenements at Mt Nicholas, the new owners promptly acquired Iron Ore Australia, along with its Mt Lewin tenements. The acquiring group bought with it a new CEO, Andrew "Twiggy" Forrest, and a change in name to Fortescue Metals. Today, with a market value of USD 13.1bn, Fortescue is one of the world's bigger mining stocks, and Forrest features regularly in rankings as Australia's richest fellow.
At this point, Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton, which, together with Vale, hold about 75% of the global seaborne iron ore market, rank as two of the world's most heavily demanded resources stocks. Vale is close behind. After voracious bouts of profit taking across the second half of 2008, it seems that iron ore's megatrend is back in place, accompanied, this time, by the rise of coking coal.
Selected iron ore names
THE THREE KINGS
Stock
From
From
Value
price
high*
low*
USD bn
Vale
USD 28.46
-11.0%
140.8%
150.517
Rio Tinto
GBP 34.65
-8.4%
162.1%
122.664
BHP Billiton
GBP 20.75
-4.5%
102.4%
192.549
Big three averages/total
-7.9%
135.1%
465.730
Weighted average
-7.7%
127.8%
TIER II, PURE/DIVERSIFIED
Evraz
USD 33.40
-8.5%
307.8%
13.860
Minmetals
CNY 17.23
-37.5%
7.7%
2.705
Hunan Valin
CNY 6.40
-38.8%
32.2%
2.567
Severstal
USD 11.79
-7.9%
262.9%
11.885
Citic Pacific
HKD 17.90
-26.2%
149.3%
8.412
Vedanta
GBP 25.69
-13.4%
421.4%
10.404
Gerdau
BRL 20.49
-13.0%
134.2%
5.660
Steel Aut. India
INR 224.65
-15.9%
223.2%
20.152
Beijing Shougang
CNY 5.35
-28.3%
55.1%
2.325
Orissa Sponge
INR 346.90
-26.7%
28.0%
0.151
NMDC
INR 434.80
-24.0%
210.3%
37.439
CAP
CLP 16,095.00
-7.0%
112.0%
4.584
Fortescue
AUD 4.70
-15.6%
115.6%
13.123
Anglo American
GBP 24.51
-17.3%
170.5%
48.212
ENRC
GBP 10.63
-2.0%
251.7%
20.457
CSN
USD 33.49
-12.2%
182.6%
25.291
Mechel
USD 23.70
-11.0%
679.6%
9.866
Kumba Iron Ore
ZAR 366.00
-4.1%
161.4%
15.441
MMX Mineracao
BRL 13.16
-8.2%
521.3%
2.234
ARM
ZAR 191.17
-1.3%
78.7%
5.324
Cliffs Natural
USD 59.08
-0.4%
400.7%
7.989
Usiminas
BRL 52.47
-7.5%
151.2%
7.373
Sesa Goa
INR 419.40
-4.6%
490.3%
7.492
Assore
ZAR 725.00
-3.3%
113.2%
2.656
Labrador Iron
CAD 47.86
-5.6%
99.3%
1.476
Magnitogorsk
USD 1.00
-8.5%
347.1%
11.141
Tier II averages/total
-13.4%
219.5%
298.216
Weighted average
-14.0%
196.9%
TIER III, DEVELOPERS & OTHERS
Golden West Resources
AUD 0.70
-34.0%
164.2%
0.090
Ferrexpo
GBP 2.90
-1.8%
548.0%
2.551
Aquila
AUD 9.82
-13.7%
468.6%
2.847
Mount Gibson Iron
AUD 1.62
-13.6%
284.5%
1.565
AusQuest
AUD 0.12
-41.0%
43.8%
0.024
Murchison
AUD 2.49
-15.3%
378.8%
0.975
Cons.Thompson
CAD 8.85
-1.3%
527.7%
1.964
Atlas Iron
AUD 2.03
-14.0%
82.1%
0.816
Gindalbie
AUD 1.02
-21.5%
102.0%
0.649
Australasian Resources
AUD 0.44
-37.1%
51.7%
0.175
Northern Iron
AUD 1.34
-33.0%
64.8%
0.352
African Minerals
GBP 3.72
-18.2%
1573.0%
1.300
London Mining
NOK 20.30
-20.7%
126.8%
0.372
Baffinland
CAD 0.52
-30.7%
188.9%
0.171
Sundance Resources
AUD 0.14
-37.2%
92.9%
0.329
Cardero Resources
CAD 1.33
-32.5%
51.1%
0.075
Northland Resources
CAD 2.02
-2.4%
431.6%
0.215
Sphere Investments
AUD 1.25
-14.7%
492.9%
0.169
Admiralty Resources
AUD 0.01
-67.6%
9.1%
0.023
Giralia
AUD 1.68
-7.9%
435.1%
0.269
Sarda Energy
INR 199.90
-19.6%
299.8%
0.148
Red Hill Iron
AUD 3.35
-18.7%
235.0%
0.132
CBH Resources
AUD 0.12
-37.8%
271.0%
0.113
Strike
AUD 0.69
-44.6%
137.9%
0.081
Brockman
AUD 3.39
-1.2%
318.5%
0.423
Golden West Resources
AUD 0.70
-34.0%
164.2%
0.090
Centaurus Resources
AUD 0.06
-21.1%
122.2%
0.032
Ferraus
AUD 0.93
-3.6%
516.7%
0.148
New Millennium
CAD 1.15
-1.7%
325.9%
0.147
Petropavlovsk
GBP 9.72
-27.7%
138.8%
2.644
Indo Mines
AUD 0.30
-45.5%
93.5%
0.025
Cape Lambert
AUD 0.44
-30.7%
109.5%
0.224
Great Northern
USD 96.01
-1.1%
59.0%
0.144
Beowulf Mining
GBP 0.04
-21.6%
190.0%
0.003
Centrex
AUD 0.53
-34.4%
218.2%
0.146
Grange
AUD 0.39
-39.6%
102.1%
0.040
Sandur
INR 518.25
-33.8%
197.8%
0.098
Nalwa
INR 1,046.90
-30.4%
132.6%
0.117
BC Iron
AUD 1.15
-22.1%
244.3%
0.087
Western Plains
AUD 0.59
-13.9%
318.4%
0.056
IMX Resources
AUD 0.45
-10.1%
169.7%
0.080
Flinders
AUD 0.12
-39.1%
135.3%
0.196
Iron Ore Holdings
AUD 2.28
-8.8%
1472.4%
0.264
Mindax
AUD 0.49
-10.9%
50.8%
0.058
Aurox Resources
AUD 0.29
-41.8%
216.7%
0.050
Polaris Metals
AUD 0.71
-18.4%
610.0%
0.128
Haoma Mining
AUD 0.11
-46.3%
100.0%
0.018
Cullen Resources
AUD 0.05
-45.3%
88.0%
0.024
Adriana Resources
CAD 0.43
-40.3%
152.9%
0.033
Jupiter Mines
AUD 0.26
0.0%
200.0%
0.085
Macarthur Minerals
AUD 1.60
-8.6%
146.2%
0.037
Talisman Mining
AUD 0.96
-33.7%
377.5%
0.090
Anglesey Mining
GBP 0.32
-1.6%
740.0%
0.072
Ironclad
AUD 1.32
-16.5%
704.9%
0.052
Helix
AUD 0.08
-39.5%
82.9%
0.009
Maximus
AUD 0.02
-46.3%
4.8%
0.005
Venture Minerals
AUD 0.33
-35.0%
296.3%
0.044
Apollo Minerals
AUD 0.18
-56.3%
29.6%
0.019
Monax Mining
AUD 0.09
-22.5%
342.9%
0.012
Iron Mountain
AUD 0.07
-54.5%
32.0%
0.007
Cazaly
AUD 0.35
-33.0%
163.4%
0.031
Red Rock
GBP 0.02
-18.8%
129.4%
0.017
Renison Consolidated
AUD 0.01
-50.0%
500.0%
0.010
Baobab Resources
GBP 0.07
-62.5%
440.0%
0.016
Centrex Metals
AUD 0.53
-34.4%
218.2%
0.146
Averages/total
-25.9%
269.2%
21.329
Weighted averages/total
-17.7%
260.9%
Overall averages/totals
-22.2%
253.5%
785.276
Overall weighted averages
-10.5%
152.7%
* 12 month
Source: market data; tables compiled by Barry Sergeant
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