COAL EASES Another energy commodity that softened in April was coal, with customs data showing imports of the fuel used to generate power and make steel eased to 40.68 million tonnes, down from the 15-month high of 41.17 million in March. However, for the first four months of the year coal imports were up 89% from the same period in 2022 on increased power demand and also as imported fuel was cheaper than domestic supplies in some of China's regions. The question for the seaborne coal market is whether April's decline marks the start of a weaker import trend. The main factor that will determine this is whether Chinese domestic prices for thermal coal continue to moderate, and if they do, whether that will result in lower seaborne imports, especially from Australia. China has only just resumed imports from Australia after ending an unofficial ban that had been imposed in 2020 as part of a political dispute between Beijing and Canberra. Australian coal imports found a ready market in recent months in China, but this was largely because they were cheaper than equivalent local supplies, a situation that has reversed in recent weeks.
METALS SLUGGISH
Turning to metals and the April trade picture was also
sifter, with arrival of iron ore and copper slipping.
Iron ore imports dropped to 90.44 million tonnes in April,
down 9.8% from March but up 5.1% from April last year.
For the first four months of the year imports of the steel
raw material were 8.6% higher than the same period in 2022 as
mills boosted output in anticipation of a rebound in housing and
infrastructure activity.
However, recent data suggests that the recovery in these
sectors is so far more modest, and signs of a slowing
manufacturing sector will add to question marks about the likely
path of steel consumption in coming months.
These same concerns are also likely to weigh on imports of
copper, with arrivals of unwrought copper and products dropping
to 407,294 tonnes in April, down slightly from 408,174 in March,
but some 12.5% weaker than in April 2022.
The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist
for Reuters.
(Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore)