Posted on 31 Mar 2010
Vale SA, the world’s largest iron ore producer, and BHP Billiton Ltd. ended a 40-year system of setting annual prices by signing short-term contracts with Asian mills, with the Brazilian company winning a 90 percent increase.
Sumitomo Metal Industries Co., Japan’s third-biggest steelmaker, agreed to pay Vale $100 to $110 a metric ton for the quarter starting April 1, spokesman Toshifumi Matsui said. BHP, the largest mining company, today said it will sell the majority of its production to Asian steel mills on shorter-term contracts without giving pricing.
A
“This represents a significant win for BHP Billiton over Asian steel mills who have long resisted the move away from annual contract pricing,” said Ben Potter, an analyst at IG Markets Ltd. in
Nippon Steel Corp.,
BHP, based in
Break With Tradition
“This is not a traditional benchmark outcome,” Amanda Buckley, a spokeswoman for BHP, said. “Details of the agreements with our customers are subject to confidentiality agreements,” she said, declining to comment on the price agreed or name customers.
Vale wants a new pricing system to improve pricing flexibility, predictability and transparency, Pedro Gutemberg, director for marketing and research at Vale, said today at a conference in
“For us, the benchmark system is old, so we decided to go this route,” Gutemberg said.
Japanese steelmakers will get in touch with their domestic customers about the change in pricing iron ore quarterly, said Muneoka, who was at a media briefing held by the Japan Iron and Steel Federation, which he chairs.
“Considering the industry stability and the impact on our customers, we still believe that annual benchmark prices are desirable,” Muneoka said.
Prices Double
Cash prices have more than doubled in the past year, and BHP,
Baosteel Group Corp., representing
Some Chinese steelmakers have privately reached deals with the suppliers though official talks are ongoing, Deng Qilin, general manager of Wuhan Iron & Steel Group, said this month.
Commercial Secrets
The four Rio Tinto employees convicted yesterday obtained secrets regarding steelmakers’ output and meetings of the China Iron & Steel Association from companies including Shougang Corp. and Laiwu Group, Chief Judge Liu Xin said. That led to the failure of iron ore price talks last year, the judge said.
Steelmakers in
“The agreements reached represent the majority of BHP Billiton’s iron ore sales volume,” BHP said today.
Prices were traditionally set each year from April 1. This year, Vale wants to set prices quarterly and BHP pushed to price its products based on an index, Baosteel’s Xu said.
Market Mechanism
“If the industry moves to a quarterly pricing, that will in fact be a true market mechanism, not driven by anyone in particular but driven very much by market forces,” Sam Walsh, the head of Rio Tinto’s iron ore operations, said March 24.
Rio Tinto’s Melbourne-based spokesman David Luff declined to comment on its talks, citing the company’s policy of not commenting on price negotiations.
Chinese steelmakers decided to buy more iron ore on the cash markets after prices plunged 68 percent between February and October 2008 during the global recession. Prices have more than doubled since, according to Metal Bulletin, an industry publication.
Rio’s Hu, an Australian citizen who led Rio’s