Posted on 18 Feb 2009
More Chinese firms in the hunt for mines
Wuhan Iron & Steel Group and Jiangsu Shagang Group, China's third- and fifth-largest steelmakers, are shopping for iron ore mining stakes in Australia and Brazil, executives said in interviews.
``We are evaluating and selecting'' candidates in Australia and Brazil, said Shen Wenrong, Jiangsu-based Shagang's chairman. ``Going overseas is the government policy, so I believe we will get financing from Chinese banks.'' Wuhan spokesman Bai Fang said his company is ``looking for opportunities'' amid lower acquisition costs for iron ore assets in Australia and ``won't rule out other countries.''
The world's top metal user, China already has acquired $US22 billion ($34 billion) worth of commodity assets this year after a 70% drop in metal and oil since July ended a six-year boom in raw materials. With US and Australian banks still hesitant to lend, Rio Tinto Group and OZ Minerals, laboring under combined debt of $US40 billion, agreed this month to sell stakes to Aluminum Corp. of China and China Minmetals, respectively.
``China has turned out to be the bank of last resort,'' said Glyn Lawcock, head of resources research at UBS AG in Sydney.
``China is a net importer of copper, bauxite, alumina, nickel, zircon, uranium. China is looking for ways to secure supply of these raw materials.''
Commodity acquisitions by China would put increasing amounts of the world's raw materials under control of their biggest consumer and may allow it to influence prices. The investment by Aluminum Corp. of China, or Chinalco as the state-owned entity is known, into Rio may bolster China's bargaining power to set iron ore prices, China Iron and Steel Association said.
Steel prices surge
China's plan to boost the economy with 4 trillion ($914 billion) yuan in spending on roads, bridges and other infrastructure has pushed up prices for steel and iron ore by as much as 37% and the cost of shipping commodities has more than doubled.
State-owned China National Petroleum Corp., the country's largest oil producer, also is looking overseas in search of oil fields. China this week agreed to provide $US25 billion of loans to Russia in return for oil supplies for the next 20 years.
Australia already has signaled concern that China is buying strategic assets on the cheap. Treasurer Wayne Swan last week tightened takeover laws when Chinalco announced its investment in London-based Rio Tinto, the world's third-largest mining company.
Swan has the power to reject both that deal and Minmetals' proposition with Melbourne-based OZ Minerals on national interest grounds. When Peter Costello was Australia's treasurer in 2001, he blocked Royal Dutch Shell Plc's bid for Woodside Petroleum Ltd. In 2004, Minmetals failed to reach an accord to buy Noranda Inc. amid objections from Canadian politicians.
Currency reserves
China's acquisition hunt is happening as the government ponders where to invest its currency reserves, which increased 27% in the past year to $US1.95 trillion, about 29% of the world's total. The country already owns $US696.2 billion in Treasuries, about 12% of the U.S.'s outstanding marketable debt and has been stung by losses of more than $US5 billion on $US10.5 billion invested in Blackstone Group and Morgan Stanley in New York and TPG in Fort Worth, Texas, since mid-2007.
``China has burnt its hands in the past buying liquid assets like Blackstone, but here they have the chance to buy tangible, useful assets,'' said Professor Liu Baocheng at the University of International Business & Economics in Beijing. ``There's no point putting money in the bank or in deposits with low returns.''