Posted on 27 May 2009
The head of BHP Billiton, the world's top miner, voiced doubts on Wednesday about the durability of recent strong Chinese demand for commodities and said the picture for global demand was unclear.
Signs of a strong pick-up in Chinese demand for industrial raw materials have fuelled a rally in commodity prices, with three-month copper surging more than 50 percent so far this year.
But BHP Chief Executive Marius Kloppers, in giving a cautious market outlook in a speech to a mining conference, pointed out that average commodity prices were still about 50 percent below their peaks, though he later declined to comment to reporters on recently renegotiated iron ore prices.
On Tuesday, rival global miner Rio Tinto Ltd and Japanese steel mills agreed to cut key iron ore prices by a third in this year's first contract deal, setting a benchmark that
He said
"We have some residual concern in the very short term that there may have been some over-buying in anticipation of the stimulus package, which may have led to some stock-build ahead of real demand," Kloppers told the conference.
He said the picture was further muddied by uncertainty over when members of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD), the global club of rich nations, would start re-stocking after running down inventories as demand collapsed.
"We do see stabilisation in the next six months as the OECD finds its base level and re-stocking commences, and as
"Importantly, in the medium term we don't expect a sharp rebound in overall economic activity; in fact, we probably believe that economic recovery will be both slow and protracted."
BHP shares were up 1.4 percent at A$34.78 in a broader market .AXJO up 1.18 percent. Rio Tinto was unchanged at A$65.46.