Posted on 01 Jul 2010
Japanese steelmakers, the world’s second-biggest producers of the alloy, and consumers such as automakers may follow Mitsui & Co. in entering the growing iron ore swaps market, according to Credit Suisse Group AG.
“We’ve been actively engaged with more than a dozen clients in
Deutsche Bank AG started offering iron ore swaps with Credit Suisse in 2008 at the instigation of BHP Billiton Ltd., the world’s biggest mining company, which was dissatisfied with the way ore in the estimated $200 billion-a-year market was priced. Vale SA, Rio Tinto Group and BHP, the three biggest suppliers, this year scrapped a 40-year tradition of setting prices annually in favor of quarterly contracts.
“Things have moved amazingly quickly this year, much faster than perhaps even we would have expected,” Toone said. “There are people who are proactively looking at it in
Trading in the swaps allows users to fix prices in advance for single cargoes. The market may grow 10-fold to 360 million metric tons annually over the next two years, Credit Suisse estimated in February. Interest in the swaps has increased following the shift to quarterly prices, Toone said.
Thyssen,
ThyssenKrupp AG,
“What we’ve seen over the past several years is that the iron ore markets are naturally evolving to shorter periods of pricing,” Tom Albanese, Rio’s chief executive officer, said in an interview at the Fortune Global Forum in Cape Town June 27. “We are going to continue to see an evolution of that market as we move forward.”