Spot Australian thermal coal has surged, but contract price is key: Russell
28 Jun 2022
LAUNCESTON,
Australia (Reuters) - The spot price of Australian thermal coal is higher than
that of coking coal, an unprecedented situation that highlights just how the
global market for the polluting fuel has been upended by Russia's invasion of
Ukraine.
But while
moves in the various spot prices tend to gather media headlines, it's worth
noting that they cover only a tiny volume of the whole seaborne market for
thermal coal, a fuel for power stations.
What are
far more significant are annual contract prices agreed between Australian
miners and Japanese utilities in an opaque process that sets the cost of
thermal coal for much of Asia.
In
effect, the spot price is the price of last resort, insofar as it is paid by
only those buyers desperate to secure supplies at any cost.
The bulk
of exports of thermal coal from Australia, the fuel's second-biggest shipper,
behind Indonesia, are priced against annual contracts agreed between miners and
Japanese utilities, which typically run from the start of the Japanese fiscal
year on April 1.
The annual contract for Australian thermal coal that is most
watched is the one between miner Glencore (OTC:GLNCY)
and Japan's Tohoku Electric Power.
The two
companies don't disclose details of the talks or the outcome, but the
settlement price generally leaks out and is followed by much of the market for
other deals.
So far
this year it appears no agreement has been reached between Glencore and Tohoku,
with the parties said by market watchers to be about $100 a tonne apart on what
Glencore wants and Tohoku is prepared to pay.
Last year
the contract was agreed at just under $110 a tonne, according to reports at the
time, which was up from $68.75 for the 2020-21 fiscal year.
This year
it's believed that Glencore initially wanted as much as $400 a tonne, while
Tohoku was aiming for closer to $150, and negotiations so far have narrowed the
gap but hardly closed it.
Assuming
an agreement is eventually struck, the new price will certainly be a
substantial hike from that of 2021-22, meaning power prices are likely to rise
in Japan - and also in South Korea and Taiwan, which also use Australian
thermal coal.
However,
it's also likely that the price agreed will be some way short of current
sky-high spot prices.
SPOT
PRICES SURGE
There are
several benchmarks for spot Australian thermal coal, with the main physical
price being that assessed by globalCOAL.
Thermal
coal at Australia's Newcastle port was assessed at $415.75 a tonne on Monday by
globalCOAL, up 4.56% on the previous day.
However,
globalCOAL also reported that there had been no physical trades so far this
week, and last week saw only one cargo of 25,000 tonnes change hands on the
company's platform.
Newcastle coal futures traded on ICE (NYSE:ICE)
ended at $392.45 a tonne on Monday, down from $397 on June 24.
Monday's
futures price was 10.8% below the record high of $440 reached on March 3, which
came in the wake of Russia's Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine. The war raised
concerns about the future of shipments from Russia, the world's fourth-largest
coal exporter.
The
Monday price also means the ICE thermal coal contract is trading above
Australian coking coal contracts in Singapore, which closed at $373.50 a tonne
on Monday.
From the time Singapore Exchange (OTC:SPXCY)
coking coal futures were launched in 2014, they traded at a premium to
Newcastle ICE thermal coal contracts - until June 1 this year, when they moved
to a discount.
Thermal
coal gained 243% in the 12 months to June 1, outpacing a 155% rise in coking
coal contracts.
Spot
Australian Newcastle coal is also trading at about eight times the price of
mid-2020, when prices had slumped amid the economic fallout from the initial
outbreaks of the COVID-19 pandemic.
The price
has reached its current elevated levels on the back of strong demand from
Europe, which is turning to seaborne coal from South Africa and even as far
away as Australia as it halts imports from Russia.
Power
shortages in India and Japan, the world's second- and third-biggest coal
importers, respectively, have also boosted demand and prices.
While
there will be some deals done using the globalCOAL physical or ICE futures
prices as a reference, this will be a small number compared to the cargoes
priced against the annual contracts.
Spot Australian thermal coal has surged, but contract price is
key: Russell