China coking coal prices set to rise to $200 a ton
Bloomberg has reported that steel mills in China, the world’s biggest producer of the alloy, may pay more for domestic coking coal this year as demand increases, Macquarie Group Ltd. said.
Chinese coking coal may rise to $200 a ton in the next quarter, Macquarie analysts led by Bonnie Liu said in a research report. Domestic coal has traded at a $15- to $25-a-ton discount to the spot market price since December, the analysts said, a gap they expect will narrow.
BHP Billiton Ltd (ASX:BHP), the world’s biggest mining company, agreed last week to a three-month contract to sell coking coal at $200 a metric ton to JFE Holdings Inc. The price indicates a “very tight market” for 2010, Liu said.
“We would expect the Chinese domestic price to edge upward imminently,” she said.
Coal imported into China has fewer impurities than domestic output and attracts a premium price, she said. This premium is making import sales more difficult, and imports may decline to an annualized rate of between 40 million tons and 45 million tons in the next quarter, down from a rate of 60 million tons a year set in January, she said.
Source: www.Bloomberg.com
Related news
- Peninsula Energy chairman talks to Proactive Investors in Stocktube Video
- Empire Energy Group hits oil production milestone in Appalachia
- Aminex and Solo Oil to carry out further analysis on Ntorya-1 well
- Angel Biotechnology shares surge as it reveals new contracts worth total of £4.5mln
- Pan Pacific Aggregates secures £2m facility from Yorkville Advisors
- Sunrise Resources reveals high grade results from Derryginagh barite project – UPDATE
- Red Rock Resources acquires option in Kansai Mining

