DailyWealth Investment Newsletter  

About DailyWealth Premium Content DailyWealth Archive
DailyWealth Investment Newsletter DailyWealth Contributors DailyWealth Resources DailyWealth Market Window
 
DailyWealth Print Edition Print Edition | Sponsored Link:
True Wealth Login

Steve's note: Today's essay comes to us from my friend Dan Denning. He's been working on a huge research project in Australia. Read on for...

The Last Secret Left in the
Mining Industry

By Dan Denning, editor, Australia Resource & Mining Report
May 15, 2008

Despite what you read from the financial newsletter industry, there aren't many secrets left in the mining sector...

In the U.S., gold majors like Newmont and AngloGold are widely held and fully valued. Australian mining giant BHP Billiton is now a regular holding of big mutual funds. Most people can look at their electric bill and realize the prices of coal and natural gas have soared in recent years. Share prices of the big coal and natural gas producers have climbed in response.

In other words, after years of commodities climbing in price, everyone wants to own them. That's what makes the story of the Pilbara so amazing...
Advertisement

The Pilbara region of western Australia looks a lot like stretches of Utah... burnt oranges and reds highlighted by spinifex, a bushy grass unique to Australia. But the special thing about this place from an investor's perspective is this: The Pilbara is home to the world's single largest deposit of high-grade iron ore... more than 34,000 million tonnes of it. It's enough to supply the entire world, at current rates of demand, for the next 300 years... and it's enough to turn the Pilbara into ground zero in the world's commodity boom.

For years, big mining companies like BHP and Rio Tinto had a lock on the Pilbara's richest deposits. But not all of them.

The slightly lower-grade ores elsewhere in the Pilbara, or the ones that were simply too far away from BHP's and Rio's existing rail and port networks, were left untouched. Now, though, with contract iron ore prices up 320% since 2003 (by comparison, gold is up "just" 147%), it's a whole different story in the Pilbara.

These days we focus a lot on the importance of energy to our comfortable way of life. But the industrial skeleton on which the infrastructure of a modern economy rests is made of iron and steel. Nations that have it become great. Nations that don't have it will do just about anything to get it.

Right now, China is doing anything to get it.

China has gone from being a net importer of steel to a net exporter in the last six years. According to the China Iron and Steel Association, China produced 151 million tonnes of steel in 2001. This year, China is on track to produce nearly 540 million tonnes of steel, a 205% increase in six years. China is now the world's largest steel producer... with an output over three times larger than No. 2, Japan.

To produce steel, you need iron ore. Australia is home to 16% of the world's iron ore reserves.

China imported 115 million tonnes of Australian iron ore in 2002, 148 million in 2003, and 208 million in 2004. It imported more than 240 million tonnes in 2005, 326 million in 2006, 384 million in 2007, and is on pace to import nearly 453 million tonnes this year. Those imports amount to more than 42% of global iron ore exports.

China needs all that ore to make all that steel because its economy is still rocketing along at 11% growth, according to the latest figures. You can never quite trust government figures, of course. It could be more. It could be less. But either way, it's a lot... and it's making Australian miners a fortune right now.

As we enter 2008, Australia is exporting iron ore, coal, gold, and other commodities to the tune of A$117 billion in earnings, according to the Australian Bureau of Agriculture and Resource Economics (ABARE). ABARE projects export earnings of A$20.2 billion for iron ore producers alone.

Just how big those earnings will actually be depends on the new contract price for iron ore in 2008. Right now, there isn't a new contract price between Aussie ore companies and Chinese steel makers. In late February, China's biggest producer, Baosteel, agreed to a 71% increase with Brazilian ore giant Vale.

But Chinese steel producers are stubbornly holding out against the even bigger increase Aussie producers are asking for. The Australians want at least an 85% increase and want to include a "freight premium" that reflects the lower cost of shipping Aussie ore to China.

The clock is ticking... An 85% increase over last year's contract price of $83.40 a tonne would put the 2008 price at $154.29, about 14% higher than the $132.20 Baosteel agreed to pay Vale. If no agreement is reached by the end of June, Aussie firms are free to sell iron ore in the spot market, where Indian ore has traded between $120 and $150 over the last six months.

Related Articles

The Coming Boom in Australian Resource Stocks

High Energy Prices Are Threatening the World's Copper Supply

This is great news for the Pilbara and its junior iron ore stocks. In fact, the anticipation of higher iron ore prices and Chinese demand has already pushed some iron ore juniors up on the year. The third major player in the Pilbara, Fortescue Metals, is up 60% year-to-date and is a prime buyout target for Chinese investors. Midwest Corporation is up 30% and may soon become the first Australian company to fall to a hostile Chinese takeover.

It's not just big miners like BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto that stand to profit from the bull market in steel. With or without a new contract price by June 30, a whole new gang of junior ore stocks will benefit from a market that just keeps getting bigger... and for investors, better.

Good investing,

Dan Denning

Email a Friend

Delicious
Reddit

Digg

RSS

THE MARKET LIKES THE BULL CASE FOR OIL SERVICES

The long-term bullish case for oil services is a no-brainer. Here's why...

When oil sells for $125 a barrel, it creates a two-pronged situation in the oil industry: 1) It encourages producers to turn on the pumps at full blast. This depletes fields faster... 2) It creates unbelievably large cash flows for the "biggies" like Chevron, Gazprom, and ExxonMobil. And they can direct those cash flows toward finding more oil... It adds up to huge demand for pumps, drill steel, offshore platforms, pipelines, and valves.

Those fundamentals sound great... but what is the market saying about it?

The market says, "I like it... Let's send Tenaris, the world's top maker of drilling pipe, to a new all-time high. Don't forget new highs for Flowserve, the big maker of pipe valves, and Gulf Island Fabrication, the rig builder. New highs for everyone who operates land drills as well. And heck, let's include the infamous Halliburton. After all, it's a bull market in oil services!"

Halliburton Co.

The benchmark price for rice exported from Thailand, the world's biggest supplier, breached $1,000 a metric ton for the first time today as importers rushed to secure supplies, heightening concern about a global food crisis.

The price of 100 percent grade B white rice, which is set weekly, gained 8.4 percent to $1,020 a metric ton, Sompetch Anuchon, an official at the Thai Rice Exporters Association, said by phone. The price has more than tripled over the past year.

– Bloomberg

US corn prices hit record levels on Thursday amid expectations that Friday's update from the US Department of Agriculture would include downward revisions to production forecasts this year as planting in the Midwest has been hampered by bad weather.

CBOT May corn rose 17¾ cents to a record $6.19¼ a bushel, up 75 per cent over the past 12 months, and lifting other agricultural commodities.

On Thursday, the International Monetary Fund warned agricultural commodity prices would stay high for the foreseeable future as supply would require new investment and policy reforms.

The IMF also said biofuel policies in advanced economies were spilling over into prices of key foods, particularly corn and soyabeans. The IMF estimated increased demand for biofuels accounted for 70 per cent of the increase in corn prices and for 40 per cent of the rise in soyabean prices.
– Financial Times

Advertisement

DailyWealth is Dr. Steve Sjuggerud's FREE daily e-Letter

To receive Steve's best investment ideas each month, try a no-risk trial subscription to his monthly advisory, True Wealth.

Get started now.

The Hamptons Life, On $100 a Day
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

Investing in the Heart Of Darkness
By Matt Badiali

Warren Buffett's Favorite Hedge Fund
By Matt Badiali

My Embarrassing Investment...
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

First the Guillotine, Then the Sandpaper 
By Dr. Steve Sjuggerud

The Largest Freezer In The World
May 14, 2008

Is it Time to Buy High-Yield Bonds Again?
May 13, 2008

Is This the End of the Gold Bull Market?
May 12, 2008

When to Buy My Favorite Asian Stock Market
May 10, 2008


The Coming Boom in Australian Resource Stocks
May 9, 2008

Home | About DailyWealth | Premium Content | DailyWealth Archive | Contributors
DailyWealth Resources | Research Reports | Privacy Policy

Customer Service: 1-888-261-2693 – Copyright 2008 Stansberry & Associates Investment Research. All Rights Reserved. Protected by copyright laws of the United States and international treaties. This e-letter may only be used pursuant to the subscription agreement and any reproduction, copying, or redistribution (electronic or otherwise, including on the world wide web), in whole or in part, is strictly prohibited without the express written permission of Stansberry & Associates Investment Research, LLC. 1217 Saint Paul Street, Baltimore MD 21202