Thermal, coking coal prices likely to drop further
08 Mar 2023
Currently,
April Newcastle thermal coal contracts on InterContinental Exchange are quoted
at $186.25 a tonne. On the Dalian Commodity Exchange, China, hard coking coal
for delivery in April was quoted at 1,907 yuan ($275.15) a tonne on Tuesday and
on Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange, April thermal coal contracts ended at 801.4
yuan ($115.57).
Price forecast
At Chinese warehouses, coking coal was quoted between $316 and
$365 a tonne. Thermal coal prices peaked at $457.80 in
September 2022, while coking coal had zoomed to over $600.
The IEA said thermal coal demand remains high in other parts of Asia,
such as India and Indonesia. The Australian Chief Economist Office forecast the
Newcastle benchmark price of thermal coal to be around $200 in 2024.
Fitch Solutions Country Risk and Industry Research, a research
unit of the Fitch Group, said it was raising its forecast for Australian coking
coal prices from $300/tonne to $350.
“...we expect price support to stem from the resumption of imports
from China. Coking coal prices have declined dramatically from their 2022 highs
and are currently hovering around $346/tonne,” it said.
Unsustainable highs
The Australian Chief Economist Office said the outlook for coal
prices appears to be mixed for 2023. However, in the long term, the energy
commodity’s rates will fall. It forecast coking coal prices to fall to $230 in
2024.
It said the high prices for coking coal were not sustainable for
long as they were driven by temporary supply disruptions as opposed to market
fundamentals.
SMM (Shanghai Metal Market) News said steel mills in China were
maintaining high operating rates, resulting in a stable demand for coke.
The situation has been complicated by recent environmental
protection checks and risking coal costs that led to a cut in production by
some plants.
India to boost output
Fitch Solutions said, “We expect coking coal prices to remain
elevated around current levels in 2023, but see limited increases above these
levels.”
Despite stronger steel production growth in India,
the second largest importer, coking coal imports from Australia will decline as
it is boosting domestic production, it said.
In Japan, steel production growth will remain muted in 2023
affecting coal imports and capping coking coal price strength, preventing any
rise to the highs of 2022.
On the supply side, the easing of the bad weather and strikes that
led to a decline in export volumes in 2022 will support production growth in
2023, improving seaborne supply and limiting price growth, Fitch Solutions
said.
In the longer term, we expect coking coal prices to remain on a
downward trend, as global blast furnace steel production slows on the back of
the transition to a greener economy. Nevertheless, prices will remain high by
historical standards over 2024-27, Fitch Solutions said.