China coking coal skids on weak demand, higher supply prospects
21 Jul 2022
Coking coal prices in China tumbled
to a seven-month low on Wednesday, weighed down by prospects of higher supply
and sustained weakness in demand for the steelmaking raw material, while fresh
hopes of economic stimulus supported iron ore.
The most-traded
September coking coal contract on the Dalian Commodity Exchange ended daytime
trade 6.7% lower at 1,922.50 yuan ($284.78) a tonne, after hitting 1,885.50
yuan, its weakest level since Dec. 13.
Coke, the processed
form of coking coal used in iron ore smelting, shed 3.6% to 2,590.50 yuan a
tonne.
“Demand for raw
materials has declined due to a reduction in steel mill production,” Sinosteel
Futures analysts said in a note.
Top steel producer
China aims to reduce output for a second consecutive year in line with its
decarbonisation goals. Steel mills have also cut production more decisively due
to weak demand as COVID-19 restrictions curbed economic activity and bad
weather hampered construction projects.
An accumulation of
coking coal supply at ports following recent COVID-19 curbs in Inner Mongolia,
a key source of the material, is also adding pressure on prices, along with
talks of China ending its unofficial ban on importing Australian coal.
“The market’s
attention to Australian coal has increased recently,” Sinosteel analysts said.
“(But) it is still unclear whether Australian coal can resume customs
clearance.”
Dalian iron ore’s
benchmark September contract slipped 0.4%, while the steelmaking ingredient’s
front-month August contract on the Singapore Exchange was up 2.6% at $99.70 a
tonne, as of 0700 GMT.
Chinese Premier Li
Keqiang on Tuesday said “painstaking” efforts were needed to stabilise the
economy’s overall performance.
Iron ore was also
supported after Brazilian miner Vale SA cut its 2022 iron ore production
forecast.
Rebar on the Shanghai
Futures Exchange SRBcv1 climbed 0.4%, while hot-rolled coil and stainless steel
both gained 0.6%.