Navigating a metals mining company through the treacherous seas of the global
economy is no easy task. There are many headwinds that can capsize a mining
company or steer it far off course, if the captain of the ship doesn't read
the signals of the marketplace correctly. And it's not only shareholders that
can get hurt from calamitous decisions, but also CEO's, such as Rio Tinto's
boss, who was sacked last week, because of a string of $34-billion of write
downs, stemming from ill-timed and over priced acquisitions of aluminum and
coal mines.
Miners must juggle many moving parts while trying to deliver new supplies
of metals to the marketplace at a profit. The costs of mining are many, including
those for energy, labor demands, decreasing grades of ore, stricter environmental
regulations, and transporting natural resources to foreign buyers. That, along
with increasing royalties paid to governments has the power to squeeze miners'
profit margins. In Australia, there's a new 30% tax on iron ore and coal mine
profits. In Indonesia, the government is telling miners that they must cede
50% of their ownership to the government. Peru is placing a new windfall tax
on the resource sector that could raise about 3-billion soles ($1.1-billion)
a year.
Recently, BHP Billiton scrapped a $20-billion plan to expand its Olympic Dam
copper mine in South Australia and a new harbor, which would've doubled its
iron ore exports in Western Australia. BHP blamed soaring development costs,
a high Australian dollar and weaker metal prices for pulling the plug on the
projects. Indeed, the selling prices of various commodities such as energy
coal, iron ore, and copper, are not just set by the costs. Rather, they are
set by the supply and demand of the marketplace, including the fickle nature
of speculators, who buy and sell metals for quick profits, and can obscure
the true level of industrial demand. Over-production causes prices to fall,
sometimes below the cost of production. Heightened demand causes higher prices
and eventual shortages.


Following the two-year recovery in base metal prices in 2009-10, the world's
top-40 mining companies invested $98-billion in capital projects in 2011.
They drew-up plans for a further $140-billion for 2012 in an effort to increase
supply. But the unexpected plunge in base metal prices in the summer of 2011
caused many miners to nix those spending plans, against a backdrop of shareholder
demands for heightened capital discipline. CEO's of mining companies became
even more cautious on capital spending, as the market price of the iShares
S&P/TSX Global Mining Index Fund (Toronto ticker: CMW) lost more than
a third of its value from the peak level at the start of 2011, before finding
support at CD$16 /share.
The iShares Global Mining Index, traded in Toronto, has since stabilized from
its nasty fall, and rebounded towards CD$18.50 per share, amid signs that
China, - the world's biggest buyer of base metals, sucking-up 40% of global
supply, is experiencing an upturn in its economy, led by a rebound in its
exports and industrial sector. Of all the variables that the CEO's of mining
companies must gauge, perhaps the most important is the outlook for China's
economy. That's especially true for the big-3 miners of iron ore, - the key
ingredient for making steel. In 2012, China produced 716-million tons of crude
steel, or 46% of the world's output. By 2015, Beijing aims to bring 60% of
world's output of steel under the control of its top 10 steel mills, while
increasing its reliance on imports of iron ore from Australia's miners.
China's Economy - Key Driver for Australia's Miners
China's economy grew at its slowest pace in 13-years in 2012. However, a year-end
growth spurt, spearheaded by Beijing's decision to spend 1-trillion yuan ($157-billion)
on various infrastructure projects, lifted industrial output. Together with
a surprising jump in exports, China ended Q'4 with a growth rate of +7.9-percent.
Although the slowest since 1999, China's economy was comfortably ahead of
Beijing's growth target of +7.5%, which just months ago seemed to be in jeopardy.
Moreover, traders are optimistic that Beijing has the necessary tools and
the know-how, to steer its economy away from a "hard landing" and can navigate
the world's #2 economy towards a healthy +8.5% growth rate in the year ahead.
If correct, Australia's streak of exceedingly good fortune would extend for
a 22nd year. Not since 1991, has Australia suffered through a recession, -
defined as two straight quarters of economic contraction. Because of its recent "coupling" to
the juggernaut Chinese economy, it's been the only major industrialized country
that was able to avoid the fallout from the "Great Recession" of 2008 that
still haunts Europe to this very day, and badly wounded the US-economy. Today,
Australia's $1.37-trillion economy is ranked as the world's 13th largest,
despite being ranked 52nd in terms of population.
It used to be said that when the US-economy caught a cold, the rest of the
world caught pneumonia. However, this is no longer the case. While it's still
the world's biggest economy, the US-economy is not very important any longer
for Australia. Instead, Australia's fortunes have become increasingly linked
to China's.The view that Australia's economy might actually have become "coupled" with
China's began to gain credibility in 2001. It was in that year that the Australian
economy avoided the same fate as Europe, Japan, and the US, which fell into
mild recessions, while Australia's managed to squeak out a growth rate of
+0.70-percent.
This was noteworthy because on the previous two occasions the US-economy had
gone into recession, in the early 1980's and the mild contraction after the
Iraqi war in 1991, Australia's economy was quick to follow. Empirical research
has found that during the 18-year period ranging between Q'1 of 1983, and
Q'1 of 2001, the correlation between the cyclical behavior of Australia's
economy and the US's business cycle was extremely high at 82-percent. Since
the turn of the century however, Australia's economy became increasingly linked
to China's, and less in tune with cyclical swings in Japan and the Western
world.


That became most apparent during the depths of the "Great Recession," especially
after the top-52 equity markets had lost a combined $ 30-trillion in market
value from their peak levels in October 2007. The economies of Europe, Japan,
and the US simultaneously plunged into severe downturns, yet Australia's economy
managed to escape the fallout, with just a minor scratch, - a single quarterly
GDP loss of -0.7% in Q'4 of 2008. Yet even that loss in economic output was
quickly recouped with a +0.8% gain in the subsequent Q'1 of 2009.
Even while unemployment in the 17 -countries that make up the Euro zone rose
ratcheted-up to 11.8% in November, with the number of jobless workers hitting
18.8 million, and caused Germany's economy to shrink by -0.50% in the fourth
quarter of 2012, Australia's economy didn't skip a beat, expanding by an annualized
+3.1%. Europe only buys 4% of Australia's exports directly while China alone
takes 26% of Australia's exports. "I remain confident that Australia, with
its strong government finances, resilient banking system, relatively low exposures
to the troubled Euro-zone countries and strong links to the dynamic Asian
region, is well placed to deal with events that may unfold," said RBA deputy
Governor Ric Battellino.
China's $7.4-trillion economy was rocked by the severe fallout from the "Great
Recession" in Europe, Japan, and the US. China's economic growth rate has
been quite volatile, ranging from as high as +14.8% to as low as +6.6% over
the past dozen years, - growth rates that make politicians in recession ridden
Europe and Japan quite envious. For the past 20-years, China's economy has
averaged +10% growth per year, roughly 3-times as fast as Australia's has
grown at an average annual rate of +3.6% for over 15-years. Highlighting the
linkage between the two economies, the RBA has been emphasizing the growth
rate of China's economy, rather than its own economy, when setting its overnight
cash lending rate.
China has also become the key driver for world commodity prices. In only 30-years,
China would become the #1 consumer of copper, steel and iron ore in the world
- consuming more them than Japan and the US combined, as well as the #2 user
of crude oil and energy, agricultural goods and other non food commodities,
such as rubber and cotton. This in turn had huge impacts on commodity rich
countries, such as Australia, Brazil, Russia, Canada, Middle Eastern oil rich
countries and South Africa.
Mining exports, especially to China, have propelled the growth, and now account
for 20% of Australian GDP. Investments in mines and related infrastructure
account for 8-percent. The country also has resource projects worth A$425
billion under way or planned as miners try to meet demand from the urbanizing
masses of China and India. Therefore, investors in Australian mining companies,
such as BHP Billiton (BHP.N) and Rio Tinto (RIO.N), must be able to juggle
several moving parts at any given moment in time. Key variables such as China's
volatile economic growth rate, the value of the US-dollar versus key currencies,
central banks' monetary policies, and an awareness of the break-even points
for global miners, are just a few of the hot potatoes that investors must
learn to juggle correctly.
China's "Command and Control" Economy, One of the defining characteristics
of the Chinese economy is the centralized control that the ruling Politburo
has over the key facets of the economy. Highly educated and skilled technocrats
pull the various levers that can either accelerate or slow the growth rate
of its juggernaut economy. For example, on Nov 9th, 2008, Beijing unveiled
a massive 4-trillion yuan ($586-billion) spending program, earmarked for various
infrastructure projects, - a vast sum equaling 16% of China's total economic
output, in order to reverse the sharp economic downturn, that had slowed its
economic growth to just +6.6%, due to the fallout from the global banking
crisis.
The People's Bank of China's (PBoC), a key arm of the Politburo, flooded China's
capital markets with 1-trillion yuan ($146 billion) in excess liquidity. China's
banks were authorized to lend as much as 8-trillion yuan ($1.17-trillion)
in new loans that year. As a result, the growth rate of Chinese bank lending
exploded and was expanding at a +34% annualized rate. In turn, China's broad
M2 money supply had grown by +29.7% Beijing proved that its "command and control" strategy
works. By Q'1 of 2010, China's economy was growing at a +12.1% clip.
However, after a doubling of the value of the Shanghai red-chip market to
the 3,300-level by Q'4 of 2009, aided by the explosive growth of Chinese banking
lending and money supply growth, of +34% and +29.7% respectively, China's
economic planners began re-think their hyper stimulating policies. On Nov
18th, 2009, Fan Gang said the Chinese government would be reversing its policies,
and would start aiming for a slower growth rate of +8%. Mr Gang emphasized
that the PBoC would need to be alert to the danger of asset bubbles, and that
managing inflation expectations would be a priority- code words for a tighter
money policy.


Sure enough, the PBoC began clamping down on bank lending and reigning-in
the growth of the money supply. During 2010 and the first half of 2011, the
PBoC hiked the banks' reserve requirement ratio (RRR) on 12 separate occasions,
for a total of 600-basis points (bps). Each 50-bps increase in RRR's drains
about 300-billion yuan ($45-billion) from the banking system. As of June 2011,
China's bank RRR stood at an all-time high of 21.5%. In turn, by the start
of 2012, the growth rate of China's M2 money supply fell to +12.4%. In turn,
Beijing whittled down the consumer inflation rate from a +6.5% in July '11
to +2% in Nov '12.
China's leaders were willing to pay the price of another epic drubbing in
the Shanghai red-chip stock index, in order to rein-in the upward spiral of
inflation, which if left unchecked, could lead to widespread social instability.
The Shanghai red-chip index lost two-thirds of its market value from its 2009-high.
Retail investors abandoned Chinese A-share stocks in droves - 50 million individual
investors lost an average of 40,000-yuan last year, according to a People's
Daily report. That's almost twice the annual average disposable income of
an urban Chinese.
Highlighting the market's deep state of despair, the China A-to-H share ratio,
measuring prices of dually listedmainland companies (A-shares) compared to
their H-share counterparts, listed in Hong Kong, fell to a discount of -2%,
a stunning development. At the peak of the speculative frenzy in the Shanghai
red-chip bubble in October of 2007, A-shares traded at a +80% premium to H-shares.
However, with A-shares trading at a discount to H-shares, many traders who
look for contrarian signals figured that the speculative froth had been completely
knocked out of the Shanghai A-share market, and therefore primed for a rebound.


Chinese traders have become accustomed to gambling on PBoC policy moves, and
were disappointed by Beijing's refusal to pour more yuan into the Shanghai
money market like it did during the 2008-09 global financial crisis. Chinese
equities tend to react positively to massive liquidity injections by the central
bank. However, many traders were caught off guard, when Beijing utilized a
different tactic to jolt the Chinese stock market higher. In August, Beijing
ordered the Central Huijin, - China's sovereign wealth fund, to begin buying
shares of Industrial and Commercial Bank of China (ICBC) and Bank of China,
by 6.3-million shares and 18.8-million shares respectively, on the open market.
In October, China's major insurance companies - China Life Insurance, Ping
An Insurance, and PICC Property and Casualty followed suit by purchasing 50-billion
yuan worth of red-chip company shares.
Then, on Dec 16th, Beijing "shocked the markets," by inviting sovereign wealth
funds and foreign central banks to invest in China's bond and stock markets
without limitation. On Jan 14th, the CSI-300 index, measuring the value of
China's top stocks traded in Shanghai and Shenzen surged sharply higher to
the 2,600-level, following comments made by Guo Shuqing, chairman of China's
Securities Regulatory Commission, hinting he would allow foreign investment
trusts to invest in China's capital markets, beyond the current quota of$80-billion."At
the moment, money invested by foreigners in China's stock and bond market
accounts for 1.5% of the total. So we can increase the quota at least 10-times," Guo
said.
Thus, Beijing has engineered a +20% rebound in its local stock market since
the start of December, by hinting at future moves to liberalize its markets,
and open-up greater amounts of investment from foreign investors. Combined
with news of a rebound in China's GDP growth rate to +7.9%, Beijing has created
the general impression in the media and the marketplace, that China's economy
is turning the corner, and poised to grow at a healthy +8% growth rate. In
turn, base metal prices, and shares of global mining companies have also rebounded,
with traders taking their cue from the gyrations in the Chinese stock markets.
Australia's Metal Miners Hitch a Ride with the Chinese Dragon,
Australia's biggest mining boom since the gold rush of the 1860's has led
to a thriving economy, the country's annual GDP (gross domestic product) growth
rate has averaged +3.5% over the past few decades. However, industries outside
of mining like tourism, retail and manufacturing are struggling mightily under
the weight of a super-strong Aussie dollar. Beneath the surface, the floating
currency, bolstered by trade with China, is widening a rift among Australia's
member states. Western Australia, the home of 10% of the country's population,
and most of its mining industry, is earning 60% of Australia's foreign exchange.
The other 90% of the country is saddled with an overly strong currency, and
its exporters are running big trade deficits with the rest of the world.
Company earnings at the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) also showcase the
country's two-tier economy. In 2011 for instance, BHP Billiton (BHP.N) the
world's largest mining company, posted a profit of $22-billion and Rio Tinto
earned $15.5-billion. Together, the two mining giants earned more than half
of the ASX-200's profit total of $71.4-billion. Upon closer examination, the
biggest money maker for BHP was its West Australian iron ore business, with
a +122% gain in EBIT to $13.3-billion, at a profit margin of 65-percent. The
next biggest earner was base metals, $6.8-billion, followed by petroleum,
at $6.3-billion.


Likewise, Rio Tinto (RIO.N), the world's #2 iron-ore miner by volume,which
mines the majority of its ore in the Pilbara region of Australia and in Canada,posted
record profits in 2011. Rio's cash cow, - iron ore - accounts for 73% of its
revenues, compared to a 40% contribution for #3 iron-ore miner BHP Billiton.Rio
Tinto's record cash flows of $27.4-billion from operations during 2011 allowed
Rio's Board of directors to pay $2.2-billion of dividends to its shareholders
and arranged $5.5-billion of share buy-backs.
The value of Australia's exports of commodities, including metals, natural
gas, and wheat, soared to a record high of $175-billion, in the 12-months
ending June 2011. The mining sector alone accounted for roughly 60% of the
country's total exports of goods, reaching a record high of A$23.6-billion
in Q'3 of 2011. This bonanza of extra income led to a virtuous cycle of good
fortune of higher profits, wages, and employment and fueled massive investment
in the development of new mines. However, it came as a rude shock to Australia's
top metal miners, when the price of iron-ore, suddenly plunged below $100
/ton in Sept '12, to a 3-year low. Mineral exports dropped in half during
the Sept-Nov '12 period, and that rattled the share prices of BHP.N, RIO.N,
and other iron-ore miners, such as Brazil's Vale.
Beijing Rescues Iron Ore Miners, - The speed and scale of the slide
in iron-ore prices came as a rude shock for Australia's miners as they had
thought there was a solid floor beneath the market in the $110 to $120 range
because below that level, many Chinese miners of iron-ore become flat out
unprofitable. Since Australia's iron ore export earnings are running at over
A$60-billion a year, a sustained decline below $100 /ton, would've led to
a significant drop to export revenues of at least A$20-billion annually. In
particular, Rio Tinto supplies 350-tons, or nearly a third of the world trade
in iron ore, and would've taken the biggest hit.
It's estimated that roughly 40% of Chinese miners become unprofitable when
the price of iron-ore falls below $100 /ton. Chinese miners simply cannot
compete on price with the top exporters in Brazil, Australia, and South Africa.
The iron content of Chinese ore currently stands at only 20%, down significantly
from 30% in 2004 and is well below the benchmark 58% and 62% ore from the
likes of Rio Tinto, Vale, and BHP Billiton. Rio says its cost of producing
iron ore is just $30 per ton, and $47 /ton, including royalties, the cost
of shipping to China, and covering capital expenses. Australia's #3 miner,
- the Fortescue Metals Group FMG.AX hasa break-even cost of around, $79 per
ton. Thus, if iron-ore stayed below $100 /ton for a considerable period of
time, RIO BHP.N, and FMG.AX could stay profitable, while more than half of
China's miners would spiral towards the brink of bankruptcy.


However, reminiscent of Q'4 of 2008, Beijing decided to stop the slide in
iron ore prices on Sept 7th, '12 and rescue its beleaguered miners. China
engineered a V-shaped recovery for iron-ore prices, when it unveiled a plan
to spend $150-billion on sixty different infrastructure projects. Share prices
of Rio Tinto were quick to react, initially rebounding from $43 /share to
$54 per share, and after a pullback, there was a secondary rally to $60.50
/share. Likewise, the spot price of iron ore rebounded above $120 /ton, the
average break-even point for China's miners. On Nov 12th, China's powerful
State Reserves Bureau (SRB) also said it would resume purchases of base metals
such as copper, aluminum, and zinc, three years after the end of a buying
spree that helped prop-up metal miners during the financial crisis of 2008-09.
But there was also an extraordinary stroke of good luck for Australia's metal
miners. On Nov 28th, the government of India said it would fully halt the
production of its iron-ore mines, after a government-backed inquiry found
that India's iron-ore miners were operating illegally, and didn't have the
basic environmental permits to operate. The closure of India's iron-ore mines
is expected to reduce global supply by 100-million tons this year, costing
India $15-billion in export earnings. The big-3 iron-ore miners Brazil's Vale,
(VALE) Rio Tinto, and BHP Billiton have already taken some of India's market
share in China, Japan and South Korea, and now are shipping the steel-making
metal to India itself.
On Dec 4th, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) lowered its cash lending rate
-25-bps to a record low of 3%, stepping up its efforts to cushion the mining
sector from the risk of a sharp slow down in China's economy. Investment in
mining projects was projected at A$109-billion for the year ended June '13,
or nearly 8% of GDP, but that figure is now in doubt. The RBA's easing campaign
has been remarkable, lowering its cash rate 125-basis points since Oct '11,
and is now matching the trough hit during the darkest days of the global financial
crisis. The RBA could lower its cash rate below 3%, in the event of a sharp
slide in metal mining shares, or if the Aussie dollar becomes too strong,
and approaches 100-yen.
Aussie Dollar - Yen Carry Trade, - Ultra-Rich in natural resources,
Australia is perfectly situated as a key supplier of industrial commodities
for Asia's industrial powerhouses. Iron-ore, its biggest export earner, accounts
for 28% of its total exports, followed by coking and thermal coal for 18%
of exports, and crude oil and natural gas for 9-percent. Last year, Australia
shipped 510-million tons of iron-ore abroad, earning A$63-billion. Coal is
Australia's second-largest export earner behind iron ore, worth about A$47-billion,
with A$16-billion from exports of thermal coal used by power stations that
generate electricity.


Japan is the second biggest buyer of Australia's natural resources, behind
China, with a 17% share of its Australian exports. For Japan's steelmakers,
the world's largest importers of coking coal, the cost of acquiring raw materials
will become increasingly expensive. Today, Japanese importers must pay ¥94
to purchase 1-Aussie dollar, compared to just ¥80 at the start of October.
The Bank of Japan is expected to flood the world money markets with $1-trillion
worth of Japanese yen in the year ahead, (dubbed Big-Bang QE) which in turn,
is fueling the Aussie Dollar - Japanese Yen Carry Trade. Simultaneously, the
sharp rebound for iron-ore prices is giving a psychological boost to the Aussie
dollar versus the yen, on ideas of an improving trade balance for Australia,
albeit, mostly earned by the mining sector.
The future of Australia's miners lies not in Europe, nor the US, nor Japan
for that matter. Rather, mining looks to where its customers reside - in the
rapidly growing China and the Emerging world. Even with the slowdown in China
- from double digits to +7.4% growth - the IMF forecasts the Emerging world
will expand at a +6% growth rate through 2016. One must not lose sight of
the fact that the world's population is rapidly increasing by a staggering
80-million persons each year, and this growth dynamic would drive greater
demand for metals, and other commodities, regardless of swings in the business
cycles.
Today, the world's money markets are swamped with ultra-cheap liquidity. Traders
turn a blind eye to negative macro-economic news. Markets are inflated by
the hallucinogenic effects of "Quantitative Easing" (QE), Japanese yen carry
trades, and global currency wars, - providing buoyancy that can lift many
boats. Fueled by an expected rebound in China's economy, a sustained rally
in Asia's stock markets, - and a full blown currency war between China, Japan,
Korea, and the US's Federal Reserve, - Australia's metal miners are expected
to hitch a ride to China's centric Bullish bandwagon.
This article is just the Tip of the Iceberg of what's
available in the Global Money Trends newsletter. Subscribe to the Global
Money Trends newsletter, for insightful analysis and future predictions
about the (1) top stock markets around the world, (2) Commodities such as
crude oil, Gold, copper and base metals, (3) Foreign currencies, such as the
Australian and Canadian dollars, Brazil real, the Euro and Japanese yen, (4)
Central bank interest rates and global bond markets, (5) Central bank Intervention
techniques (6) and key Credit Default Swap markets.
GMT filters important news and information into (1) bullet-point,
easy to understand reports, (2) featuring "Inter-Market Technical Analysis," with
lots of charts displaying the dynamic inter-relationships between foreign
currencies, commodities, interest rates, and the stock markets from a dozen
key countries around the world, (3) charts of key economic statistics of foreign
countries that move markets.
Subscribers can also listen to bi-weekly Audio Broadcasts,
posted Monday and Wednesday evenings, with the latest news and analysis on
global markets. To order a subscription to Global Money Trends, click
on the hyperlink, http://www.sirchartsalot.com/newsletters.php or call
toll free to order, Sunday thru Thursday, 8-am to 9-pm EST, and on Friday
8-am to 5-pm, at 888-808-7978. Outside the US call 561-391-8008.