China's iron ore imports appear set for a strong February, with commodity analysts Kpler estimating arrivals of 100.22 million tonnes, which at 3.58 million tonnes a day would exceed the 3.48 million that landed in January.
China's steel prices are also rising on expectations of stronger demand, with benchmark Shanghai Futures Exchange rebar contracts ending at 4.167 yuan ($608.32) a tonne on Monday, up 3.4% over the past week. SUPPLY SLUMP It's not only the demand side that is working to boost iron ore prices, with some concerns over the state of supply from the world's two biggest exporters, Australia and Brazil. Australia's iron ore exports are likely to drop in February, with Kpler estimating shipments of 57.7 million tonnes, while Refinitiv is forecasting 58.74 million. While these figures are likely to be revised higher as more cargoes are assessed prior to month end, it's likely that February's exports will fall well short of Kpler's figure for January shipments of 79.64 million and December's 84.58 million. Brazil's exports are likely to recover somewhat in February after being hit by weather disruptions in January, with Kpler estimating shipments of 28.57 million tonnes and Refinitiv expecting 29.48 million. This would be up from January's exports of 22.91 million, which Kpler data showed were Brazil's weakest since February last year. While Australia and Brazil dominate the global seaborne iron ore trade, it's worth noting that other exporters aren't adding much to the overall supply story. South Africa, the world's third-largest exporter, is forecast to ship 4.12 million tonnes in February, down from January's 4.59 million, while India is expected to export 1.48 million, down from 3.49 million. The supply shortage and expectations of increasing Chinese demand are likely to provide a solid base for further gains in spot iron ore prices. However, it's likely that supply will return to normal levels in coming months, which may cap the upside potential. The other factor is whether the market's optimistic view on the likely success of China's stimulus plays out in reality, or whether it takes longer than anticipated to fire up the world's second-biggest economy. The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ GRAPHIC-China iron ore imports vs spot price: ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^> (Editing by Jacqueline Wong)
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