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Global miners set to face more closures in 2016
GLOBAL miners are battling to stay afloat after enduring one of the toughest years in recent times, with tumbling commodity prices and supply gluts set to force more closures and massive cuts in 2016, analysts say.
China’s once insatiable appetite for commodities — boosted by an unprecedented investment boom in the world’s second-largest economy — has waned, with its shift toward consumption-driven growth dampening demand.
At the same time, large producers have continued to lift output levels, which critics say is designed to flood the market and push out smaller competitors, accelerating the decline in prices.
The iron ore price sank below US$40 in early December, its lowest since May 2009, thermal coal prices are 80 percent off their 2008 peak while world oil prices have sunk to an eight-year low.
The sharp falls have ravaged the bottom line of miners across the world, pushing smaller players to the brink while tearing billions of revenue out of the government budgets of resources-dependent economies such as Australia.
Even major players such as London-listed Anglo-American has had to slash its workforce by almost two-thirds and shut loss-making mines amid the deepening rout, while Swiss giant Glencore is planning to trim its debt by cutting investment and selling assets.
“You only need to look at any share price to know it’s been an absolutely shocking year for commodity markets and for mining companies,” CLSA’s head of resources research Andrew Driscoll said.
Anglo-Australian BHP Billiton, one of the world’s largest miners, has seen its Australian share price dive by over 40 percent this year, while stocks in rival Rio Tinto have dropped by 26 percent.
Rio’s chief executive Sam Walsh said the firm’s competitors were in so much trouble that they were “hanging on by their fingernails.”
“Sooner or later the adjustment will take place,” Walsh told Bloomberg Television this month.
The slump comes on the back of a commodities supercycle over the past decade, led by China but also fuelled by other resources-hungry developing nations growing their economies rapidly, which pushed prices to record levels.
But as miners borrowed heavily and ramped up output, they overestimated the growth in demand, analysts said.
“They’ve added far too much capacity for that new, more moderate demand outlook, so we have surpluses in every commodity,” said UBS commodities analyst Daniel Morgan.
“I think it’s definitely one of the toughest years the mining industry has faced in many years,” he added, saying the woes were comparable to previous slumps sparked by the 2007-08 global financial crisis, the 1997 Asian financial crisis and even the 1991 fall of the Soviet Union.
Goldman Sachs said last week the iron ore sector might need to “hibernate for an extended period,” predicting that prices would stay below US$40 for three years.
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