(Adds detail around BHP, Tesla, nickel supply woes)
MELBOURNE, Jan 22 (Reuters) – Wyloo Metals, a private investment company owned by iron ore billionaire Andrew Forrest, will put its Australian Kambalda nickel operations on care and maintenance at the end of May as a result of low nickel prices, it said on Monday.
The miner supplies concentrate to BHP Group's Nickel West operations south of Perth, which in turn has an agreement to supply Tesla with the metal key to electric vehicle batteries.
It comes as nickel miners are announcing writedowns and restructures across the board and after BHP last week flagged possible writedowns at its operations.
“We are exploring a number of options for the long-term future of our business," Wyloo CEO Luca Giacovazzi said in a statement.
Wyloo Metals last year bought Mincor's Kambalda nickel operations for $504 million. Kambalda nickel has capacity of 15,000 metric tons and has a contract to supply BHP Group until 2025.
Giacovazzi still believes in the long-term fundamentals for Australian nickel, he told Reuters last week. (Reporting by Melanie Burton; Editing by Lisa Shumaker and Stephen Coates)
(Bloomberg) — Wyloo Metals Pty Ltd., the private nickel producer owned by billionaire Andrew Forrest, is shutting down its Western Australian mines due to a sharp slump in prices for the key transition metal.
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The mines near Kambalda will go into care and maintenance from May 31, the company said in a statement on Monday. Wyloo, which bought the mines only six months ago, informed BHP Group Ltd. that it won’t be able to fulfill a nickel off-take agreement that’s due to expire at the end of 2025, a spokesperson added.
Prices for nickel — used to make stainless steel and EV batteries — have slumped in the past year, mainly driven by a flood of cheap supply from Indonesia that’s threatening to disrupt the industry. Earlier this month, First Quantum Minerals Ltd. said it will halt mining at its nickel and cobalt operation in Australia and cut a third of the workforce in response to weaker metal prices and higher costs.
The closure of Wyloo’s Kambalda mines comes after BHP, the world’s biggest miner, last week warned it could be forced to write down the value of its nickel to mitigate the crash in prices.
Wyloo, which owns assets in Canada and Australia, last year also entered into a joint venture agreement with with IGO Ltd. to produce battery-ready materials at a plant near Perth. Despite the shutdown of the mines, it’s studying developing its own nickel concentrator in the Kambalda region, Wyloo said in the statement.
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(Bloomberg) — Whitehaven Coal Ltd. is studying options to sell a 20% stake in the Blackwater mine to global steelmakers as it works to finalize a $3.2 billion deal for two Australian assets.
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The producer is exploring opportunities as it also works to complete the acquisition of Blackwater and Daunia sites from co-owners BHP Group Ltd. and Mitsubishi Corp. by early April.
“Interest is very, very strong” in relation to a stake in Blackwater, Chief Executive Officer Paul Flynn told analysts Friday on a call. “We’ll think about the opportunity with Daunia at a later date.”
Read more: BHP to Sell Coking Coal Mines to Whitehaven for $3.2 Billion
Whitehaven’s shares advanced as much as 7.3% as of 12:10 p.m. Sydney time.
Metallurgical coal, used in steel production, is showing signs of strengthening and an “anticipated growing structural shortfall” in higher quality material to supply Asia — and particularly India — will underpin prices over the longer term, the producer said.
Whitehaven’s average received coal price fell 4% in the three months to Dec. 31 on the previous quarter, as the market continues to normalize after 2022’s shocks to energy supply. Global demand for the fossil fuel likely peaked in 2023, according to the International Energy Agency.
High-calorific value thermal coal prices are likely to remain strong over the long-term because of underinvestment in new supply and the depletion of existing mines, Whitehaven said. Russian sanctions and weather-related impacts in Queensland have also contributed to recent tightness.
(Updates to add CEO comment, share price from third paragraph)
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(Bloomberg) — BHP Group Ltd. is considering options for its Australian nickel operation to mitigate the impact of a sharp fall in prices and warned it could be forced to write down the value of the assets, the latest sign of trouble in the green metals sector.
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The world’s largest miner said it was assessing market conditions for the key battery material and will update investors next month, along with half-year results.
“The nickel industry is undergoing a number of structural changes and is at a cyclical low in realized pricing,” BHP said in Thursday’s statement. “Nickel West is not immune to these challenges.”
Nickel prices dropped 45% last year, weighed down by a flood of cheap supply from Indonesia, where new techniques to produce battery-grade material are threatening to disrupt the industry. BHP’s warning adds to a string of similar announcements from other companies, as smaller miners struggle to raise money from more traditional sources and grapple with rising costs.
Earlier this week, First Quantum Minerals Ltd. said it would halt mining at its nickel and cobalt operation in Western Australia and cut a third of the workforce in response to weaker metal prices and higher costs. The metal is used to make stainless steel and EV batteries.
Read More: Battery Metal Price Plunge Is Closing Mines and Killing Deals
BHP produced 19,600 tons of nickel in the final three months of 2023, up 11% from the year before, it said in Thursday’s statement. The company’s Nickel West operations include three mines, a smelter in Kalgoorlie, its Kwinana refinery and a sulphate plant.
Under Chief Executive Officer Mike Henry, BHP has reshaped its portfolio by exiting oil and gas, selling coal assets and completing the $6 billion takeover of OZ Minerals Ltd. to add more exposure to copper. Demand for that metal is forecast to surge as the world decarbonizes due to its use in power grids and electric vehicles.
A potential writedown of Nickel West would not be overly material to BHP as the metal forms a “a very small part of their overall business portfolio,” Barrenjoey resources analyst Glyn Lawcock said in a phone interview.
“By nature we’re in a cyclical industry — today, it feels like nickel’s not the place I want to have money tied up and invested in,” said Lawcock, who added that the massive surplus of Indonesian supply had caught the market by surprise.
Mainstay Product
Even as Henry shifts focus to energy-transition materials, iron ore remains BHP’s mainstay product. The company’s output of the steelmaking material in the three-month period was 65.8 million tons, down 2% from the year before.
Chinese demand for steel has plateaued and production is on track to peak before the end of the decade, dented by a years-long crisis in the nation’s property sector, which has typically consumed more than a third of the country’s steel output. While there’s some growth in smaller segments like manufacturing of electric cars and air conditioners, the pace of construction has slowed, meaning the nation’s iron ore imports are forecast to decline.
Earlier this week, BHP’s rival Rio Tinto Group reported output of iron ore for the three months to Dec. 31 fell 2% to 87.5 million tons.
Meanwhile, BHP’s copper production rose 3% in the three months, while metallurgical coal slumped 18%. Production guidance ranges for the fiscal year remained unchanged for all assets, with the exception of coking coal which was lowered. In October, BHP agreed to sell two Australian coking coal operations to Whitehaven Coal Ltd. for at least $3.2 billion.
Operations at BHP’s Saraji coking coal mine were suspended on Jan. 15 after a worker fatality and are expected to progressively restart over the coming days, it said Thursday.
BHP’s shares in Sydney fell as much as 2.2% before trading 1.3% lower to A$45.985 apiece at 1:20 p.m. local time on Thursday.
(Updates with Nickel West project details in 6th paragraph, analyst comments in 8th)
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*
BHP to offer more detail on nickel unit at earnings on Feb 20
*
Western Australia iron ore output eases 2.2%, meets forecasts
*
Quarterly copper output falls 4%
(Rewrites throughout, adds detail on nickel operations, copper production)
By Melanie Burton
MELBOURNE, Jan 18 (Reuters) – BHP Group said on Thursday it was reassessing the value of its nickel operations after a price slump, in a move that could lead to writedowns amid an oversupply of the metal used in electric vehicle batteries.
The world's biggest listed miner, which signed a deal to supply nickel to Tesla in 2021, is reevaluating the business after prices fell 40% in the last year as Indonesian supply jumped, causing restructures and writedowns at nickel mines across Australia.
BHP said it was looking at options to mitigate the impacts of the sharp fall in nickel prices and that it would offer more details at its half-year results on Feb. 20.
"The nickel industry is undergoing a number of structural changes and is at a cyclical low in realised pricing," it said in quarterly production report. "Nickel West is not immune to these challenges….Given the market conditions, a carrying value assessment of the Group's nickel assets is ongoing."
BHP may write down the value of the West Musgrave nickel project it acquired with its purchase of OZ Minerals last year that experts valued at $1.2 billion, analysts said. The mine, currently under development, could also be delayed.
BHP could put its Nickel West unit that include its Kwinana plant that produces nickel sulphate under strategic review for a possible sale, although this was seen by analysts as less likely, or choose to delay planned investment.
Earnings tanked at BHP's nickel business in the 2023 financial year, sliding 61% from a year earlier to just $164 million. The division accounts for less than 1% of its earnings but is a major part of its green energy marketing strategy.
BHP failed to sell the division about a decade ago due to an estimated $1 billion in closure costs at the time.
Elsewhere, BHP reported a small 2.2% drop in second-quarter iron ore production that was in line with analyst forecasts as it ties in its rail line to a central production hub in the Pilbara region.
Iron ore production from Western Australia on a 100% basis was 72.7 million metric tons (Mt) in the three months to Dec. 31, down from 74.3 Mt reported a year ago.
That compares with a Visible Alpha consensus estimate of 72.5 Mt, according to Morgan Stanley.
BHP said it was working with authorities after a worker at its BHP Mitsubishi Alliance (BMA) coal business was fatally injured in a vehicle incident on Jan. 15.
BHP logged a 4% drop in quarterly copper production to 457,000 metric tons due mostly to lower concentrator grades at its Escondida mine in Chile.
(Reporting by Melanie Burton in Melbourne and Himanshi Akhand and Echha Jain in Bengaluru; Editing by Maju Samuel and Jamie Freed)
By Melanie Burton
MELBOURNE (Reuters) – Australian nickel producers, hit by a sharp jump in supply from rival Indonesia, are starting to buckle under low prices that analysts expect will force a rethink by top global miner BHP Group on its nickel strategy this year.
The metal has long been feted as a key battery material for electric vehicles because it improves energy density so cars can run further on a single charge.
BHP has promoted nickel as core to its green strategy. It signed a deal to supply Australian nickel to Tesla in 2021, touting the country's rich geology and strong financial and environmental regulations.
But Australia's producers have been squeezed by Indonesia's emergence as a supply powerhouse and on the demand side by innovations away from using nickel in batteries, which have led to a 40% price slump over the past year to around $16,000 a ton.
"The challenges facing many nickel producers are unlikely to ease near term. We are bearish on the commodity and quite cautious on assets and producers," said UBS analyst Lachlan Shaw.
Lithium iron phosphate (LFP), which does not use nickel, has been gaining ground as the EV battery chemistry of choice, especially in China, because LFP batteries can be produced more cheaply, making EVs more affordable.
However, BHP has placed a big bet that nickel sulphide deposits in low-risk jurisdictions will attract a premium because they use less energy to extract nickel than laterite deposits found in Indonesia.
It is not alone.
Wyloo Metals, which last year bought nickel miner Mincor for $504 million, still believes in the long-term fundamentals for Australian nickel, said CEO Luca Giacovazzi.
"The industry needs a more appropriate and transparent pricing mechanism, that distinguishes between clean and dirty nickel, so consumers can be confident their EV really is a better choice for the environment," Wyloo's Giacovazzi told Reuters.
But for now, weak prices have forced Australia's high cost producers to announce a swathe of writedowns and restructures, with Canada's First Quantum the latest to cut production.
SHELVING PROJECTS?
Earnings tanked at BHP's nickel business in the 2023 financial year, sliding 61% from a year earlier to just $164 million. The division accounts for less than 1% of its earnings.
"We are working hard to remain globally competitive in a very tough operating environment. Costs have risen sharply and continue to go up while prices have fallen as new supply comes into the market," said BHP Nickel West Asset President Jessica Farrell.
She said the company is working to "take action to address these challenges", without elaborating.
At its Western Australian nickel operations, BHP is assessing options for a major smelter renewal and a mine expansion while it sets out to build the West Musgrave mine that it acquired with its $6.4 billion takeover of Oz Minerals.
One option for BHP could be for it to delay West Musgrave until the market recovers, said Barrenjoey analyst Glyn Lawcock.
"Clearly right now nickel is challenged," he said. "(But) I think to write nickel off today for forever is a big call."
Even with the growing use of LFP batteries, they won't capture 100% of the market. As consumers go for cheaper cars, governments could mandate greener sourcing policies, he noted.
"It's going to be a big decision point for BHP this year," Lawcock said.
(Reporting by Melanie Burton; Editing by Sonali Paul)
In the name of “national security”, Beijing has imposed new exports controls on graphite, restricting one of the most critical battery metals to Western markets as China attempts to dominate the global EV market. It’s both a threat and an opportunity. It’s an opportunity if you are a rare graphite processing company with operations in both the U.S. and China.
One of the biggest news pieces on the graphite scene since Beijing’s export restrictions was a proposed SPAC deal in December 2023 that could see Graphex Group (NYSE American: GRFX), with a market cap of $40 million, sell its USA processing business for between $100 million and $200 million. The USA processing business would be spun off as a separate Nasdaq listing.
Graphex isn’t a cash-guzzling mining operation with years-long exploration processes to get through: The USA spinoff will be processing graphite—a first in the country—and that’s where some 85% of the graphite profit is. The company is now moving forward quickly with design and equipment selection for its flagship Detroit graphite processing plant and the hunt is on for additional locations, with major JV and offtake deals apparently underway.
Beijing’s market-dominating move has also helped strengthen Graphex China’s operations in East Asia, where output is now expected to triple by the first quarter of 2025.
Led by veteran energy sector leader John DeMaio, Graphex USA is leading a SPAC deal that not only awards shareholders through a buyout worth multiples of the current market capitalization but also gives investors exposure to the most critical supply line for North America’s massive EV push.
On December 6, Graphex Group (NYSE American: GRFX) and its wholly-owned U.S. subsidiary, Graphex Technologies, LLC entered into a Letter of Intent (LOI) with an independent NASDAQ-listed blank check company to acquire 100% of the equity interest of Graphex Tech.
The pre-money enterprise value, net of liabilities, for Graphex Tech is anticipated to be between $100 million and $200 million in a deal that is set to close in the first half of 2024.
This is a US-based company that is building its first graphite processing plant in Detroit, Michigan, and is now on the hunt for more locations across the U.S. and Canada.
It's also in advanced and late-stage testing with the auto industry, battery manufacturers, and OEMs (original equipment manufacturers). And it already has JVs and offtake deals with non-Chinese entities that meet the strict compliance requirements set down by the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act (IRA).
And it’s a critical metals segment that will play a huge role in defining North American security and the energy transition.
Graphite is the biggest—and most critical–component in any lithium-ion battery. It makes up 95-99% of the anode (negative electrode). The average lithium-ion battery contains 15X more graphite than lithium, and for lithium, North America already has a much clearer path to supply not dominated by China.
North America has zero commercial production of refined graphite.
Graphex could end up being the first to domesticate this supply chain.
Right now, it’s in the final stages of the construction of its 15,000-ton-per-annum graphite refining facility in Detroit–the heart of America’s auto industry. First production is expected in the first quarter of 2025.
The Safe China Exposure
The team at Graphex Group (NYSE American: GRFX) has over a decade of experience processing graphite in Asia. The current CTO has designed and built multiple Asian plants, from Korea to China.
All that China-based experience is now being rebuilt in North America, led by Graphex Technologies President John DeMaio– former President, CEO, and Board Member of JouleSmart Solutions, general manager of Siemens Smart Infrastructure, VP of MWH Global, VP of SPG Solar and COO of Thompson Solar Technologies.
From an investor’s point of view, the key to profiting from the graphite supply chain is not mining—it’s processing, which represents over 85% of the value of this segment. And that’s exactly where Graphex USA is focusing. There won’t be any mining overhead expenses– just multi-source, IRA-compliant graphite processing capabilities.
By the third quarter of 2024, Graphex Asia aims to double its graphite production from 10,000 metric tons per year to 20,000 metric tons per year. By the first quarter of 2025, the company aims to triple this to 30,000 metric tons, with bank financing already approved for the production ramp-up. And they are hoping to get ~$5500 per metric ton for that graphite.
And back on the home front in North America, Graphex believes it has multiple raw graphite supply deals lined up to feed its Detroit processing plant—along with other proposed new plants as they come online–in accordance with the IRA sourcing requirements for North American supply that doesn’t come from China.
Late last year, Graphex entered into an LOI with Northern Graphite Corporation (TSXV:NGC) for raw material supply, and signed an MOU with Reforme Group Pty Ltd. And in January this year, they joined forces with Northern Graphite to build a large-scale graphite processing facility in Quebec’s Baie-Comeau region. The partners are now evaluating sites to house a facility that could produce up to 200,000 tons of graphite annually. They also have an LOI with Canada-based Gratomic for raw graphite to evaluate building.
Then, in August this year, they signed the biggest supply deal yet with Syrah Resources’ Balama graphite operation in Mozambique, the largest in existence outside of China, with a production capacity of 350,000 metric tons per year.
Both Mozambique and Tanzania are poised to become major graphite miners, home to the fifth- and sixth-largest graphite reserves in the world, respectively.
With Beijing’s restrictions on graphite exports, Graphex represents an interesting way for non-Chinese investors to gain exposure to the China graphite market. Graphex Asia already has the necessary export licenses.
In 2021, China only housed some 22% of global graphite reserves, yet it produced over 79% of the world’s supply because of its processing power. That same year, the U.S. was 100% reliant on foreign sources of processed graphite, one-third of which came from China. Graphex Group (NYSE American: GRFX) is North America’s first chance at diversifying this supply with an unprecedented domestic solution.
Other miners to keep an eye on in 2024:
Compass Minerals International (NYSE: CMP), based in Overland Park, Kansas, is a leading provider of essential minerals, including salt, sulfate of potash, magnesium chloride, and even sustainable lithium. The company's diversified product mix serves a wide range of markets, including agriculture, consumer deicing, water conditioning, and various industrial applications.
Beyond its current offerings, Compass Minerals is investing in new technologies and methods to enhance the efficiency and environmental sustainability of its operations. The company's focus on innovation is particularly evident in its approach to lithium extraction, where it aims to capitalize on the growing demand in the electric vehicle market. This strategic direction not only diversifies their portfolio but also positions Compass Minerals as a key player in the transition to a more sustainable global economy.
Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (NYSE: FCX), based in Phoenix, Arizona, is one of the world's leading mining companies, with significant reserves of copper, gold, and molybdenum. The company's sizeable asset base includes the Grasberg minerals district in Indonesia, one of the world's largest copper and gold deposits, and significant mining operations in the Americas. With copper being a critical material in renewable energy and electric vehicle technologies, Freeport-McMoRan stands to benefit from the global push towards greener economies.
Freeport-McMoRan is also actively involved in community engagement and environmental stewardship. The company has implemented various initiatives aimed at reducing its environmental footprint and promoting sustainable mining practices. These efforts include water management, biodiversity conservation, and emission reduction strategies. By focusing on responsible mining, Freeport-McMoRan is not only ensuring compliance with environmental standards but is also contributing to the broader goal of sustainable development in the regions it operates.
Rio Tinto (NYSE: RIO), a global leader in the mining and metals sector, is known for its operational efficiency and commitment to sustainable development. The UK-Australian multinational corporation operates in around 35 countries worldwide and has significant assets across several commodities including aluminum, copper, diamonds, coal, iron ore, and uranium. Rio Tinto's robust portfolio of world-class assets is further reinforced by strong market fundamentals, especially in the copper and iron ore markets, making it an interesting proposition for potential investors.
In addition to its extensive mining operations, Rio Tinto is a leader in the implementation of cutting-edge technologies and sustainable mining practices. The company's commitment to reducing its carbon footprint and protecting the environment is evident in its various initiatives, such as investments in renewable energy and efforts to rehabilitate mining sites post-extraction. Rio Tinto's proactive approach to corporate responsibility and sustainability is an integral part of its business strategy, setting a standard for the mining industry.
FMC Corporation (NYSE: FMC), based in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is a global agricultural sciences company that delivers innovative technology to growers around the world. While not a mining company in the traditional sense, FMC has a significant stake in lithium, a critical component in rechargeable batteries and other high-tech applications.
FMC's commitment to innovation and sustainability is noteworthy, and the company's agricultural products contribute to increased crop yield and quality, making it a significant player in addressing global food security issues. In recent years, FMC has benefited from robust demand for its crop protection products, driven by higher commodity prices and strong agricultural market fundamentals.
Livent Corporation (NYSE: LTHM), a spin-off from FMC Corporation, is a global leader in lithium technology, powering the electric vehicle revolution. The Philadelphia-based company supplies lithium used in batteries for hybrid and electric vehicles, mobile devices, and other consumer electronics. Livent's position in the high-growth lithium market, driven by increasing demand for electric vehicles, makes it a compelling option for investors seeking exposure to the green energy transition.
Livent Corporation is expanding its reach in the global lithium market by investing in new technologies and forming strategic partnerships. Their focus on sustainable lithium extraction and processing methods demonstrates a commitment to environmental responsibility. As the demand for lithium continues to grow, Livent's role in supplying this critical material for electric vehicles and renewable energy storage becomes increasingly significant, positioning them as a key contributor to the green energy transition.
BHP Group (NYSE: BHP), headquartered in Melbourne, Australia, is one of the world's largest mining companies. It primarily deals in commodities like iron ore, copper, coal, and nickel. BHP is particularly known for its large-scale operations and has significant assets in Australia, North and South America, and other regions. The company's focus on sustainable mining practices and its diverse portfolio of commodities make it a key player in the global mining industry.
BHP Group's commitment to sustainability extends to all aspects of its operations. The company is investing in technologies to reduce greenhouse gas emissions and improve water usage efficiency. BHP's focus on creating sustainable mining practices reflects a broader trend in the industry towards environmental responsibility and could set new standards for mining operations worldwide.
Vale S.A. (NYSE: VALE) headquartered in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, is one of the world's largest miners of iron ore and nickel. It also produces copper, coal, manganese, and ferroalloys. Vale has a strong presence in several countries and is known for its large-scale operations, especially in Brazil and Africa. The company's focus on producing essential minerals for global industries, along with its commitment to sustainable mining practices, makes it an important entity in the resources sector.
Vale's focus on sustainability is also prominent in its corporate strategy. The company has made significant investments in renewable energy projects and initiatives to reduce carbon emissions in its operations. Vale's commitment to responsible mining practices and community engagement has been integral in maintaining its position as a leader in the global mining industry, especially in the areas of iron ore and nickel production.
Newmont Corporation (NYSE: NEM) is one of the world's leading gold mining companies and also a producer of copper, silver, zinc, and lead. Newmont operates in various countries including the United States, Canada, Mexico, Dominican Republic, Peru, Suriname, Argentina, Chile, Australia, and Ghana. The company's emphasis on responsible mining practices and its extensive portfolio of assets in gold and other minerals make it a significant player in the global mining sector. Additionally, Newmont's commitment to sustainability and community development initiatives aligns it with modern environmental and social governance criteria.
Newmont Corporation is actively involved in various initiatives to promote sustainable mining practices. These include efforts to minimize the environmental impact of its operations, improve safety standards, and engage with local communities. Newmont's approach to responsible mining is a key aspect of its business strategy, reflecting its commitment to ethical practices and long-term sustainability in the mining sector.By. Tom KoolIMPORTANT NOTICE AND DISCLAIMER
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This article will list the world's top silver mining companies and highlight the recent trends in the silver industry. You can skip our detailed overview of supply and demand intricacies of silver and read 5 Biggest Silver Mining Companies in the World.
Global Silver Demand and Supply
In 2022, the dynamics of global silver demand and supply underwent major changes. The year saw a minor decline in mine production, with a 0.6% drop to 822.4 million ounces, in contrast to the previous year's robust growth of 5.8%. According to the Silver Institute, this decrease primarily resulted from reduced output at lead/zinc mines, notably in China and Peru, where silver production decreased by 3.5% to 248.2 million ounces. However, this decline was partially offset by increased silver production in gold and copper mines, which rose by 1.0% to 129.5 million ounces and 0.8% to 212.0 million ounces, respectively. Production from primary silver mines remained relatively stable, with a marginal 0.1% increase, totaling 228.2 million ounces.
Meanwhile, the demand for silver experienced an upswing in 2022, with total demand increasing by 18% to 1,242 million ounces, reaching its highest level since 2010. Notably, silver recycling continued to rise for the third consecutive year, growing by 3% and reaching a 10-year peak of 180.6 million ounces. This underscores the growing interest in silver as both a mined resource and a recyclable commodity.
Must Read: Top 20 Gold Mining Companies in the World
Major Silver-Consuming Sectors
Silver experiences high demand in key sectors, namely physical investment, jewelry, and silverware. Regarding the investment aspect, the Silver Institute reported a significant increase in physical silver investments for the fifth consecutive year in 2022, reaching a record 332.9 million ounces. Notably, India stood out with a staggering 188% year-over-year increase in silver investments, driven by lower prices and bargain hunting.
Silver jewelry manufacturing also saw impressive growth, rising by 29% to a record 234.1 million ounces in 2022, primarily driven by India. In India, a combination of pent-up demand post-pandemic and restocking led to a doubling of volumes from the previous year. However, excluding India, there was a slight decline in jewelry manufacturing.
The US experienced reduced demand as consumer spending normalized. In contrast, Europe showed some increase in silver jewelry demand, driven by increased local consumption despite a drop in exports from Italy. Thailand, Indonesia, and Turkey also reported growth due to a recovery in exports and improvements in domestic sales. It's worth noting that jewelry manufacturing is expected to decrease by 15% at the end of the fiscal year, returning to pre-pandemic levels, particularly in India, where the market is adjusting after the 2022 surge.
Lastly, silverware manufacturing outpaced jewelry in terms of growth percentage, experiencing an 80% increase in demand in 2022, reaching 73.5 million ounces. This boost, as seen in the jewelry sector, was mainly driven by India, where demand more than doubled in 2022 as employment and income levels returned to pre-pandemic norms.
Also Read: 10 Largest Cobalt Mining Companies and Their Mines in the World
Top Silver Producing Countries
The largest silver-producing countries in the world are Mexico, China, and Peru. In 2022, Mexico led the way with an impressive production of 6,300 metric tons, drawing from its reserves of 37,000 metric tons. Following closely, China also made a significant contribution, producing 3,600 metric tons of silver, supported by its substantial reserves estimated at 71,000 metric tons, according to the US Geological Survey. Peru, ranking third in silver production, boasts the world's largest silver reserves, totaling 98,000 metric tons. In 2022, Peru's commitment to sustainable mining practices resulted in a silver production of 3,100 metric tons.
Let's now talk about the top silver mining companies in the world!
15 Biggest Silver Mining Companies in the World
15 Biggest Silver Mining Companies in the World
Our Methodology
We identified the world's largest silver companies based on their average silver production over the past three years. This was determined using data from The Silver Institute's World Silver Surveys of 2022 and 2023, along with the companies' annual reports. The top silver mining companies were ranked in ascending order according to their annual silver yield.
Based on the available data, here are the top silver mining companies in the world:
15. First Majestic Silver Corp (TSE:FR)
Average Annual Silver Production:11.6 million ounces
First Majestic Silver Corp., headquartered in Vancouver, is among the biggest silver mining companies in the world, with a notable presence in Mexico. The company's primary mining sites in Mexico include the San Dimas, Santa Elena, and La Encantada mines. The most prominent among them is the Santa Elena Silver/Gold Mine, which encompasses an extensive area of 102,244 hectares and operates both the Santa Elena and Ermitaño underground mines.
Looking ahead to the end of 2023, First Majestic has set ambitious production targets, aiming to achieve a record high of 33.2 million to 37.1 million silver equivalent ounces. This represents approximately a 12% increase from the previous year. This production goal is further broken down into 10 million to 11.1 million silver ounces and 277,000 to 310,000 gold ounces. The projected all-in sustaining cost per silver equivalent ounce is expected to range between $18.47 and $19.72.
14. Boliden AB (STO:BOL)
Average Annual Silver Production: 11.8 million ounces
Boliden AB, a European company headquartered in Stockholm, primarily focuses on silver extraction in three key areas: the Boliden Area, Garpenberg, and Aitik. The Boliden Garpenberg mine stands out as one of the world's most efficient underground zinc mines and holds the distinction of being Sweden's oldest active mining area. This mine processes complex ores containing a combination of zinc, lead, silver, copper, and gold. In 2022, Garpenberg processed approximately 2,989 kilotons of ore, resulting in the production of metal concentrates, including silver.
13. BHP Group (NYSE:BHP)
Average Annual Silver Production: 12 million ounces
BHP Group (NYSE:BHP), among the world's most valuable mining companies, operates several copper mines, notably the Escondida mine in Chile and the Antamina mine in Peru. Silver is a significant byproduct of copper and zinc mining within the company's operations, contributing to its high global silver production. Another key asset in BHP's silver production portfolio is the Olympic Dam operation in South Australia, known for its vast deposits of copper, gold, silver, and uranium. BHP Group (NYSE:BHP) also manages the Carrapateena and Prominent Hill mines in Australia, both notable for their substantial gold and silver projects.
12. South32 (ASX:S32)
Average Annual Silver Production: 12.7 million ounces
South32, an Australian mining and metals organization, plays a significant role in the global silver mining industry. In the fiscal year 2022, the company achieved a notable milestone by producing 12.3 million ounces of silver. The primary source of this impressive production is the Cannington site located in Queensland, Australia, which ranks among the world's largest silver production sites.
Expanding its operations beyond Australia, South32 is also advancing the Hermosa project in Arizona, USA. This forward-looking project encompasses two significant deposits: the Taylor sulfide deposit, rich in zinc, lead, and silver, and the Clark oxide deposit, known for its zinc, manganese, and silver content.
Also Read: Top 20 Diamond Producing Countries in the World
11. Hecla Mining Company (NYSE:HL)
Average Annual Silver Production: 13.5 million ounces
Founded in 1891, Hecla Mining Company (NYSE:HL) is one of the largest silver-producing companies in the US, operating active mines in Alaska, Idaho, Quebec, and Canada and developing a new mine in Canada's Yukon region.
In 2022, Hecla Mining Company (NYSE:HL) achieved substantial success, reporting a silver production of 14.2 million ounces, a 10% increase over the previous year. This remarkable growth was primarily attributed to substantial production increases at two key mines: the Lucky Friday mine in Idaho, which experienced a 24% boost, and the Greens Creek mine in Alaska, contributing to a 5% rise. Notably, Greens Creek was a major contributor, accounting for 9.7 million ounces of the total silver produced in 2022.
During the first three quarters of 2023, despite a slight decline in silver production in the third quarter compared to the second quarter, the company's overall output for the first nine months of 2023 demonstrated an 8% increase compared to the same period in 2022, totaling 11,407,232 ounces of silver.
10. Volcan Cia Minera (BME:XVOLB)
Average Annual Silver Production: 13.8 million ounces
Volcan Compañia Minera S.A.A., a leading mining firm based in Peru, specializes in various activities, including exploring, extracting, processing, and selling polymetallic ores, with a particular focus on silver. This company is situated in the mineral-rich Central Andes regions of Junin and Pasco, where it operates 16 polymetallic mines: 11 underground and five surface mines, along with six processing plants and a gold mine concentrator. Despite its extensive operations, the company saw a slight decline in silver production in 2022, with output decreasing by 5% to 14.3 million ounces (Moz) from the previous year's 15 Moz.
9. Pan American Silver Corp (NYSE:PAAS)
Average Annual Silver Production:18.3 million ounces
In 2022, Pan American Silver Corp (NYSE:PAAS) successfully produced 18.5 million ounces of silver, meeting its adjusted projection of 18.0 to 18.5 million ounces. Initially, the company had aimed for a higher range of 19.0 to 20.5 million ounces. Additionally, it achieved significant gold production, totaling 552.5 thousand ounces, which fell within its forecasted range of 550.0 to 605.0 thousand ounces for the same period. The third quarter of 2023 marked a notable period for Pan American Silver Corp (NYSE:PAAS) as it recorded a silver output of 5.7 million ounces and achieved a record-breaking gold production of 244.2 thousand ounces.
8. Southern Copper Corp (NYSE:SCCO)
Average Annual Silver Production: 19.7 million ounces
Southern Copper Corporation (NYSE:SCCO), a prominent player in the silver mining sector, has recently experienced fluctuations in its silver production. In the third quarter of 2023, the company produced 4,390,000 ounces of silver, marking a 10% decrease compared to the same period the previous year. This decline was consistent across all their operations, except for the Toquepala mine. Additionally, there was a 7% decrease in the company's silver sales volumes year-over-year.
Despite these production and sales challenges, Southern Copper Corp (NYSE:SCCO) exhibited robust financial performance in the third quarter. The company's net sales increased by 16.2%, primarily attributed to higher prices for molybdenum, silver, and copper. Its net income also showed significant growth, reaching $619.5 million, a 19.4% increase from the previous year's third quarter.
7. Polymetal International plc (OTC:POYYF)
Average Annual Silver Production: 20.08 million ounces
Polymetal International plc operates in Russia and Kazakhstan, consistently delivering strong performance. In the third quarter of 2023, the company's gold equivalent production increased by 12% compared to the same period the previous year, reaching a total of 508 thousand ounces. This significant rise was primarily driven by heightened production levels at their Russian facilities, including Urals, Mayskoye, and Dukat sites. Throughout the first nine months of 2023, Polymetal continued this growth trajectory, reporting a 6% year-on-year increase in gold equivalent production, totaling 1,272 thousand ounces, with substantial contributions from both Kazakhstan and Russia.
6. Hindustan Zinc Ltd (NSE:HINDZINC)
Average Annual Silver Production: 22.02 million ounces
Hindustan Zinc Ltd, headquartered in Udaipur, Rajasthan, India, has achieved the remarkable status of being the world's fifth-largest silver producer, as highlighted in the 2023 World Silver Survey by The Silver Institute. Since its inception in 2002, when it produced 41 tonnes, the company has steadily expanded its production capacity to reach 800 tonnes. In 2022, Hindustan Zinc Ltd produced an impressive 694 tonnes (22.2 million ounces) of silver. Notably, the company's silver refinery in Pantnagar, Uttarakhand, has earned recognition from the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) and holds a place on the prestigious "London Good Delivery" list. The silver produced at Hindustan Zinc's refinery boasts an exceptional purity level of 99.99%, adhering to the stringent standards set by the LBMA.
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Disclosure: None. 15 Biggest Silver Mining Companies in the World is originally published at Insider Monkey.
In this piece, we will take a look at the 13 best mining stocks to buy now. If you want to skip our analysis of the mining industry and want to jump to the top five stocks in this list, head on over to 5 Best Mining Stocks To Buy Now.
The global supply of mineral commodities from underground sources is crucial for numerous industries worldwide. In terms of volume, the most widely extracted commodities globally include iron ore, coal, potash, and copper. Leading in coal production are China, Indonesia, and India, while China also holds the third position as the largest producer of iron ore. Notably, the country also emerged as the primary mining country for various commodities, particularly in the case of rare earths, where it contributed to 70% of the global production in 2022, underscoring its increasing prominence in this sector.
Despite strong financial performance, mining revenue remained constant at $711 billion in 2022. However, increasing costs and economic uncertainties resulted in a squeeze on EBITDA margins, declining from 32% to 29%, as indicated by a recent analysis by PwC into the sector. The 20th edition of PwC's annual review, titled "Mine: The era of reinvention," focused on trends within the global mining industry, particularly examining the Top 40 mining companies. The report revealed a significant growth in market capitalization for these top companies, soaring from $400 billion in 2003 to an impressive $1.2 trillion in 2022.
One particular mineral, Gold, holds significant importance in the financial world, particularly due to its well-established relationship with the U.S. dollar. The correlation between gold prices and the value of the U.S. dollar is widely recognized. Changes in the dollar's value tend to result in corresponding changes in gold prices. This relationship is grounded in the perception of gold as the ultimate safe-haven asset. Consequently, gold prices generally exhibit an inverse correlation with the U.S. dollar. Gold is often regarded as a key indicator of investor sentiment against the dollar. Notably, in the week ending December 22, gold experienced a second consecutive rise, attributed to the decline in the dollar and U.S. Treasury yields, fueled by growing expectations that the Federal Reserve will implement interest rate cuts early in the coming year.
The global mining market witnessed growth, increasing from $2022.6 billion in 2022 to $2145.15 billion in 2023, with a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 6.1%. However, the Russia-Ukraine war has impeded the prospects of a swift global economic recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in the short term. This conflict has resulted in economic sanctions on multiple nations, a surge in commodity prices, and disruptions in the supply chain. These factors have contributed to inflation in both goods and services, impacting various markets worldwide. Despite these challenges, the mining market is anticipated to continue its growth trajectory, reaching $2775.5 billion in 2027, with a projected CAGR of 6.7%.
With that in mind, today we will explore some of the best mining stocks for potential investment, with prominent choices including Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (NYSE:FCX), Teck Resources Limited (NYSE:TECK), and Agnico Eagle Mines Limited (NYSE:AEM).
13 Best Mining Stocks To Buy Now
Drills extracting gold from a gold mine, revealing the company's gold mining operation.
Our Methodology
In creating our selection of the best mining stocks to buy, we initially identified the forty largest mining companies globally, ranking them based on market capitalization. Subsequently, we assessed the number of hedge funds that had invested in their shares as of September 2023 using data from Insider Monkey's database, encompassing 910 hedge funds. Hedge funds’ top 10 consensus stock picks outperformed the S&P 500 Index by more than 140 percentage points over the last 10 years (see the details here). That’s why we pay very close attention to this often-ignored indicator.
13. Sigma Lithium Corporation (NASDAQ:SGML)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 15
Sigma Lithium Corporation (NASDAQ:SGML) stands as a prominent Canadian mining enterprise specializing in the exploration and development of lithium deposits located in Brazil. The company boasts full ownership of the Grota do Cirilo, Genipapo, Santa Clara, and São José properties, which collectively cover 27 mineral rights across an expansive area of approximately 191 square kilometers.
In September, Sigma Lithium Corporation (NASDAQ:SGML) announced the successful production of 22,500 tonnes of battery-grade, carbon-neutral lithium, marketed as "Triple Zero Green Lithium." This eco-friendly product is devoid of hazardous chemicals and tailings, aligning with sustainability principles. The lithium has been prepared at Vitoria Port for transport to Glencore as part of their collaborative venture. The collaboration with Glencore aims to establish an environmentally conscious and socially responsible lithium supply chain, catering to the global electric vehicle market.
According to Insider Monkey’s third-quarter database, 15 hedge funds held long positions in Sigma Lithium Corporation (NASDAQ:SGML), reflecting an increase from 12 funds in the previous quarter. Balyasny Asset Management, under the leadership of Dmitry Balyasny, is a noteworthy stakeholder in the company, holding 540,139 shares valued at approximately $17.5 million.
Much like Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (NYSE:FCX), Teck Resources Limited (NYSE:TECK), and Agnico Eagle Mines Limited (NYSE:AEM), Sigma Lithium Corporation (NASDAQ:SGML) ranks as one of the best mining stocks to buy now.
12. Alamos Gold Inc. (NYSE:AGI)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 23
Alamos Gold Inc. (NYSE:AGI) is an intermediate gold producer based in Canada, boasting diversified production from three operational mines in North America and a robust portfolio of growth projects. These mines encompass the Young-Davidson and Island Gold mines in northern Ontario, Canada, and the Mulatos mine in Sonora State, Mexico. Notably, the company has exceeded analyst EPS estimates in all four of its most recent quarters. Additionally, in November 2023, Scotiabank upgraded AGI shares to Sector Outperform from Sector Perform.
As of September 2023, 23 out of the 910 hedge funds polled by Insider Monkey had invested in Alamos Gold Inc. (NYSE:AGI). Jean-Marie Eveillard’s First Eagle Investment Management was the firm’s biggest shareholder as it owned $107 million worth of shares.
11. Wheaton Precious Metals Corp. (NYSE:WPM)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 24
Wheaton Precious Metals Corp. (NYSE:WPM) is a Canadian multinational company focused on precious metals streaming. The company plays a key role in the production of over 26 million ounces and the sale of more than 29 million ounces of silver, sourced as a by-product from the main operations of other mining companies.
On December 6, Canaccord analyst Carey MacRury maintained a Buy rating on Wheaton Precious Metals Corp. (NYSE:WPM) stock and raised the price target to C$74 from C$67.
At the end of the third quarter of 2023, 24 hedge funds in the database of Insider Monkey held stakes worth $488 million in Wheaton Precious Metals Corp. (NYSE:WPM), compared to 24 in the previous quarter worth $534 million.
10. BHP Group Limited (NYSE:BHP)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 25
BHP Group Limited (NYSE:BHP) is a prominent global metals and mining company, operating across Asia, Oceania, North America, and various other regions. In keeping with the industry's shift towards renewables and environmentally sustainable practices, BHP Group Limited (NYSE:BHP) announced plans for a new battery energy facility for its Australian mines in November 2023.
Insider Monkey examined the shareholdings of 910 hedge funds during the September quarter of this year, revealing that 25 held a stake in the company. Among these, Fisher Asset Management, led by Ken Fisher, stands out as the largest investor in BHP Group Limited (NYSE:BHP), owning 19.3 million shares valued at $1 billion.
9. Rio Tinto Group (NYSE:RIO)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 27
Rio Tinto Group (NYSE:RIO) is recognized as one of the largest diversified mining companies worldwide, committed to the exploration, mining, and processing of a wide array of mineral resources. The company's expansive portfolio encompasses minerals such as lithium, aluminum, copper, iron ore, diamonds, gold, borates, titanium dioxide, salt, silver, and molybdenum.
In the September quarter of 2023, among the 910 hedge funds monitored by Insider Monkey, 27 initiated positions in the company's shares. Fisher Asset Management, under the leadership of Ken Fisher, emerged as the largest hedge fund investor in Rio Tinto Group (NYSE:RIO) with a significant stake valued at $990 million.
8. Kinross Gold Corporation (NYSE:KGC)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 29
Kinross Gold Corporation (NYSE:KGC) is a Canadian gold and silver mining company that was established in 1993, with its headquarters located in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Presently, Kinross operates six active gold mines. Notably, the company has demonstrated strong financial performance in recent times, surpassing analyst EPS estimates in all four of its latest quarters.
29 out of the 910 hedge funds part of Insider Monkey’s Q3 2023 database had invested in Kinross Gold Corporation (NYSE:KGC). Jim Simons’ Renaissance Technologies was the firm’s biggest shareholder as it owned $128 million worth of shares.
7. Vale S.A. (NYSE:VALE)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 34
Headquartered in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Vale S.A. (NYSE:VALE) and its subsidiaries are actively involved in the production and sale of iron ore and iron ore pellets, serving as essential raw materials for steelmaking, both within Brazil and in the global market. The company operates through two segments: Iron Solutions and Energy Transition Materials.
In the third quarter of 2023, Vale S.A. (NYSE:VALE) reported a 7% year-over-year increase in net operating revenues, totaling $10.62 billion. The company's adjusted EBIT from continuing operations demonstrated robust growth, with a 17.5% year-over-year increase, reaching $3.40 billion. Additionally, the adjusted EBITDA from continuing operations experienced a significant 13.9% year-over-year rise, amounting to $4.18 billion. Vale S.A. (NYSE:VALE) also achieved a noteworthy improvement in gross profit, reaching $4.31 billion, reflecting an 18.9% increase compared to the same quarter in the prior year. Furthermore, the net income from continuing operations attributable to VALE stood at $2.84 billion.
During the third quarter of 2023, 34 out of the 910 hedge funds surveyed by Insider Monkey held a stake in the company. The largest stakeholder among these is Fisher Asset Management, led by Ken Fisher, with ownership of shares valued at $242.96 million.
6. Barrick Gold Corporation (NYSE:GOLD)
Number of Hedge Fund Holders: 36
Barrick Gold Corporation (NYSE:GOLD), based in Toronto, Ontario, Canada, is a mining company specializing in the production of gold and copper, operating across 16 sites in 13 countries. During the third quarter of 2023, the company recorded net earnings of $368 million, accompanied by a rise in gold production to 32.4 tons, compared to 31.5 tons in Q3 2022. Notably, Barrick Gold Corporation (NYSE:GOLD) also completed the acquisition of 7 million warrants to acquire additional shares in Hercules Silver Corp. (TSXV:BIG) on November 10, 2023, for an approximate sum of $4.76 million.
According to Insider Monkey’s database, the hedge fund sentiment was positive toward Barrick Gold Corporation (NYSE:GOLD)’s stock. In the third quarter, the number of hedge funds bullish on the stock was 36, up from 32 in the previous quarter. Ken Griffin’s Citadel Investment Group was among the top stakeholders in the company.
Barrick Gold Corporation (NYSE:GOLD) joins the ranks of Freeport-McMoRan Inc. (NYSE:FCX), Teck Resources Limited (NYSE:TECK), and Agnico Eagle Mines Limited (NYSE:AEM) as one of the best mining stocks to invest in.
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(Bloomberg) — Vast heaps of crushed brown rock hem the Indian Ocean at Western Australia’s Parker Point port — each a stockpile of 200,000 tons of iron ore, ready to be poured into a procession of bulk carriers bound for Asia’s steel mills.
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Rio Tinto Group, the world’s largest iron ore producer, shipped its first cargo of the steelmaking ingredient from this spot in 1966, at the dawn of a boom that minted billionaires and lifted the Australian economy, generating A$1.3 trillion ($820 billion) in earnings in the past two decades alone. Last year, iron ore shipments accounted for about 5% of the country’s gross domestic product.
But now China is cooling, while steel producers are under pressure to clean up a sector that accounts for at least 7% of global greenhouse gas emissions, a change that will require new methods and higher-quality raw materials. Much of the dry, dusty Pilbara region’s gargantuan resource base may no longer make the grade.
Rio, BHP Group Ltd. and Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. produce almost two-thirds of the world’s seaborne iron ore from Western Australia, and margins remain enviable. For the first time in a generation, though, the specter of disruption looms over mining’s most reliable profit generator.
“Australia’s ore industry is now at the start of a long-term structural decline,” said Tom Price, a London-based analyst at Liberum Capital Ltd. “It’s a fundamental shift that will resonate across the Australian economy.”
The first, and most urgent, question is China, which accounts for about 85% of Australia’s export earnings from iron ore.
Demand for steel in the second-biggest economy has plateaued and production is on track to peak before the end of the decade, dented by a years-long crisis in China’s property sector, which has typically consumed more than a third of the country’s steel output. While there’s some growth in smaller segments like manufacturing of electric cars and air conditioners, the economy is no longer building at breakneck speed, meaning the nation’s iron ore imports are forecast to decline. Impact is inevitable, even if other emerging nations make up for some of China’s lost appetite.
Still, the more intractable long-term challenge for the Pilbara’s giants may well be a green one.
At least 70% of steel is produced today using a process that’s been deployed in much the same way since the 14th century: metallurgical coal is heated to create coke, which is then used in a blast furnace to melt iron ore at temperatures of more than 1800C.
It’s an energy-intensive activity and one that produces about two tons of carbon dioxide for each ton of liquid steel, according to Rio.
Global demand for steel is still rising, and will climb by as much as a quarter through 2050, as India and developing economies across Asia industrialize — but investor, consumer and climate pressure on one of the dirtiest corners of industry is growing. Governments are acting too, with policies like the European Union’s carbon border adjustment mechanism, that penalizes carbon-heavy imports.
Read more: What It Would Take to Make Steelmaking Greener: QuickTake
The trouble for big diggers is that there are few attractive alternatives. Existing lower-emissions options include the use of electric arc furnaces — a method that doesn’t require coal and uses recycled steel scrap in place of iron ore. A shaft furnace route, deployed in about 5% of steel production, needs high grade pellets with low levels of impurities.
Among the most favored prospective solutions is to combine a renewables-powered electric furnace with direct reduced iron, a material produced by deploying natural gas to remove oxygen from premium ores. Eventually replacing the gas with green hydrogen — created using solar or wind energy — could dramatically cut steel emissions.
But Australia’s typical iron ore has a grade of between 56% and 62%, making it largely unsuitable for DRI production — or only with additional processing that could add as much as 25% to costs, according to Wood Mackenzie Ltd.
“The premium for higher grade material is going to increase significantly,” said David Cataford, chief executive officer of Champion Iron Ltd., a competitor to Australian producers which supplies higher-grade iron ore from Canada. “If you’re producing lower grade, we do feel it’s going to be more complicated in the medium-term.”
The biggest miners say they already produce the better stuff. Vale SA, which ships higher-quality raw material from Brazil and expects to command a green premium in future, is among those eager to forecast a world that favors richer ores. But higher-grade production — with an iron content of 66% or more — currently makes up only about 3% of global supply, so the race is on to crank up output from projects like the expansive (and expensive) Simandou development in Guinea, in which Rio is an investor.
“There’s an obvious shortage if demand ramps up during the course of decarbonization,” said Liu Yinghao, technical director at the low carbon metallurgy innovation center of China Baowu Steel Group Corp., one of the world’s top steelmakers.
The shortfall in higher grade iron ore could be as much as 200 million tons a year by 2050, Wood Mackenzie estimated in a report this month — a volume roughly equivalent to about a fifth of China’s current annual imports.
To plug the gap and hold on to their position in the market, Australia’s iron ore producers are experimenting with everything from microbes to straw, in a series of trials aimed at making their materials suitable for greener steelmaking. BHP is studying use of carbon capture technology at conventional steel mills and has a pilot with Hatch Ltd. to build an electric smelting furnace — a method that adds an additional process step and holds potential to utilize lower-grade raw material.
“If we can crack the code on the Pilbara ores, that is potentially a game changer,” Tania Archibald, chief executive for Australian steel products at BlueScope Steel Ltd. — among 40 entities collaborating with Rio — told an investor day last month.
Billionaire Andrew Forrest’s Fortescue, meanwhile, has begun production of small volumes of high-quality magnetite ore at its Iron Bridge project in the Pilbara, and has tested a coal-free electrolysis method to convert ore to green iron.
Forrest sees potential to go further than that intermediate step, and to use Australia’s advantages in renewable energy for a low-carbon revival of a domestic steelmaking sector that saw output peak a quarter of a century ago.
“Australia has got everything going for it to make its own steel,” Forrest said earlier this month in Perth, citing the country’s solar and wind resources, and potential to produce green hydrogen. “The policies right now channel against doing that — and encourage offshore production.”
Steelmakers are positioning for that shift, including South Korean giant Posco, which aims to develop new industrial facilities in Port Hedland, the Pilbara’s export hub.
Few changes come fast in mining. Australia’s iron ore incumbents say they have sufficient time to make the technology breakthroughs or strategy shifts they need to continue to prosper.
“The transition away from coal-based steel making is a reality, but it will take some time and there remain significant uncertainties,” said Simon Farry, Rio’s head of steel decarbonization.
After all, traditional blast furnaces in Asia are relatively new — on average about 12 years old in China, compared to more than 40 years across the mostly wealthy nations in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development — and will operate for decades more, according to BHP’s Chief Economist Huw McKay. “The age of capital stocks is a critical factor in assessing the energy transition,” he told Bloomberg Television in an Oct. 24 interview. India will likely to prioritize the need for affordable steel from existing processes, he said.
But several markets are already adapting quickly, including Japan, South Korea, and — to a more limited extent — China, as Vale said in a written response to questions. Iron ore’s No. 2 supplier is adding output tailored to direct reduction in Brazil, and developing hubs in locations including Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and Oman to produce materials from as soon as 2027 for future green steelmaking.
Australia’s mining industry has been caught out before by the pace of change. Back in the early 2000s, it struggled to keep up with China’s accelerating iron ore consumption. Now, the risk is repeating the error at the other end of the economic and green cycle.
“The world is going to decarbonize,” Vale said. “If we don’t act quickly, we could miss this opportunity.”
–With assistance from Yee Xing Ng "Liz", Jacob Lorinc, Mariana Durao, Thomas Biesheuvel and James McIntyre.
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(Bloomberg) — Australia’s accelerating shift from coal-fired power to clean energy is stoking volatility in its power markets and raising concerns for large businesses, according to BHP Group Ltd., the country’s most valuable company.
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The main National Electricity Market, which covers about 80% of Australia’s demand, is experiencing the largest fluctuations in daily electricity prices globally, driven by issues including unplanned outages of coal plants and the integration of rooftop solar, according to Rystad Energy.
“It’s a nervous time to be a major consumer of electricity on that particular grid,” Huw McKay, BHP chief economist, said Tuesday in an interview with Bloomberg Television.
Following its acquisition of OZ Minerals Ltd., BHP is seeking to lift copper output from mines in South Australia, and wary over the unpredictability in the state’s energy system as work continues on constructing an interconnector linking the region to neighboring New South Wales, according to McKay. “We are anticipating a period of heightened volatility,” he said.
Read More: BHP Sees Squeeze for Global Copper Markets Later This Decade
South Australia had the country’s highest wholesale electricity prices in the three months to Sept. 30, averaging A$92 ($58) per megawatt hour compared to a national figure of A$63 per megawatt hour, according to the Australian Energy Market Operator.
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Teck Resources Limited TECK recently announced that its third-quarter 2023 steelmaking coal sales volumes have been impacted by the slower-than-expected supply-chain recovery following the wildfires in British Columbia, labor disruption at ports, and plant challenges.
Steelmaking coal sales volumes were 5.2 million tons in the third quarter compared with 5.6 million reported in the year-ago quarter. It also came in lower than the sales volume of 6.2 million tons in the second quarter of 2023. Volumes also fell short of the company’s guidance of 5.6 to 6.0 million tons for the quarter.
During its second-quarter conference call, Teck Resources had provided the guidance factoring in lower inventories at the end of the second quarter and planned maintenance shutdown activities at two of its operations during the third quarter.
The company had also stated that labor disruption at ports could impact its sales volumes in the third quarter. Teck Resources had thus anticipated a rise in transportation costs as it utilized its additional port capacity to deliver on customer commitments. The company, however, maintained its transportation cost guidance at 45-48 CAD per ton for the steelmaking coal segment in 2023. Teck Resources reported average realized steelmaking coal price of $229 per ton in the third quarter of 2023. This was lower than the steelmaking coal prices of $304 per ton in the third quarter of 2022 and $264 per ton in the second quarter of 2023. TECK expects to report provisional pricing adjustments of $23 million in its third-quarter results, which are scheduled to be reported on Oct 24, 2023.
In the second quarter of 2023, the segment reported sales of CAD$2.25 billion ($1.68 billion), reflecting a year-over-year slump of 39% due to the significant decline in steelmaking coal prices from the all-time highs in the same period last year. The segment reported a gross profit of CAD$1,100 million ($821 million) in the second quarter, which was down 57% from the second quarter of 2022.We expect the steelmaking coal segment’s sales to be around CAD $1.63 billion ($1.21 billion) in the third quarter of 2023. Compared with the sales of CAD $2.27 billion, the figure indicates a year-over-year drop of 28%.Teck Resources had earlier stated it is actively engaged in the divestment of the steelmaking coal business and is engaging with a number of potential suitors. The business is garnering interest due to its significant high-quality steelmaking coal reserves and stable demand outlook.Teck confirmed in June that it is engaging with Glencore GLNCY about their proposal regarding the steelmaking coal business. Glencore has offered about $8.2 billion to buy the business.In case this business is sold, TECK will be able to focus solely on the metals needed for the energy transition, such as copper and zinc. Teck Resources and other mining companies like BHP Group BHP and Rio Tinto plc RIO, among others, are trying to capitalize on the growing demand for copper, driven by electric vehicles, renewable energy and infrastructure investments.BHP has created a new copper province in South Australia following the acquisition of OZ Minerals in May 2023. The company is investing strategically in new ideas, technologies and countries through exploration and early-stage copper and nickel prospects to capture growth opportunities.Rio Tinto, in August 2023, had announced that it has formed a joint venture to develop the La Granja copper project in Peru. It is one of the largest undeveloped copper deposits in the world and will augment Rio Tinto’s copper portfolio.The company is also developing the Oyu Tolgoi project in the South Gobi region of Mongolia. It is one of the largest known copper and gold deposits in the world. When the underground mine is complete, it will be the fourth-largest copper mine in the world.
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For Immediate Release
Chicago, IL – October 20, 2023 – Zacks.com announces the list of stocks featured in the Analyst Blog. Every day the Zacks Equity Research analysts discuss the latest news and events impacting stocks and the financial markets. Stocks recently featured in the blog include: Visa Inc. V, AbbVie Inc. ABBV, BHP Group Ltd. BHP, Caterpillar Inc. CAT and Boston Scientific Corp. BSX.
Here are highlights from Thursday’s Analyst Blog:Top Research Reports for Visa, AbbVie and BHP
The Zacks Research Daily presents the best research output of our analyst team. Today's Research Daily features new research reports on 16 major stocks, including Visa Inc., AbbVie Inc. and BHP Group Ltd. These research reports have been hand-picked from the roughly 70 reports published by our analyst team today.You can see all of today’s research reports here >>>Visa shares have outperformed the Zacks Financial Transaction Services industry over the past year (+27.9% vs. +21.7%). The company’s numerous buyouts and alliances paved the way for long-term growth and consistently drove its revenues.Constant investments in technology are solidifying its position in the payments market. A shift in payments to the digital mode is a boon for Visa. The company's steady domestic volumes and transactions rise will aid its overall performance. A strong cash position enables it to boost shareholder value.However, high operating expenses stress its margins. Ramped-up client incentives will dent the top line. Its volumes are likely to see diminishing effects of the Russia-Ukraine conflict. As such, this stock warrants a cautious stance.(You can read the full research report on Visa here >>>)Shares of AbbVie have gained +8.7% over the past year against the Zacks Large Cap Pharmaceuticals industry’s gain of +27.8%. The company has several new drugs in its portfolio that have the potential to drive the top line to make up for lost Humira revenues. Skyrizi and Rinvoq have established outstanding launch trajectories bolstered by the approval in new indications.It has several early/mid-stage candidates that have blockbuster potential. However, there are concerns about long-term sales growth since Humira generics have entered the U.S. market. Increasing competition from newer therapies is hurting Imbruvica’s sales.Slowing consumer demand due to economic pressure is hurting the aesthetics franchise’s sales. Nonetheless, though revenues are expected to decline in 2023, AbbVie expects to return to robust sales growth in 2025. Estimate movements have been mixed ahead of Q3 results. ABBV reported impressive earnings surprise in recent quarters.(You can read the full research report on AbbVie here >>>)Shares of BHP have gained +25.4% over the past year against the Zacks Mining – Miscellaneous industry’s gain of +26.7%. Iron ore prices had earlier lost steam on weak demand in China. Hopes of a pickup in demand in China, owing to a fresh round of stimulus measures for new infrastructure projects, helped lift up prices lately.Going forward, iron ore prices will be supported by demand in the automotive sector, infrastructure and housing market. Copper and nickel prices will be fueled by demand for electric vehicles.BHP’s investment in projects with a focus on future–facing commodities like copper, nickel and potash will aid growth. Efforts to make operations more efficient through technology will drive earnings.(You can read the full research report on BHP here >>>)Other noteworthy reports we are featuring today include Caterpillar Inc. and Boston Scientific Corp.
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BHP Group and Japan’s Mitsubishi have agreed to sell two jointly owned steelmaking coal mines in Australia to Whitehaven Coal for up to $4.1 billion in cash. It’s a deal that shows there are still buyers for coal assets, despite worries over their carbon emissions. Higher-quality metallurgical coal is in demand for operations looking to reduce emissions.
(Bloomberg) — BHP Group Ltd. said it agreed to sell two Australian coking coal operations to Whitehaven Coal Ltd. as the world’s biggest miner extends its withdrawal from fossil fuels.
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Whitehaven has been selected as the preferred bidder in the divestment process, BHP said in its quarterly production report released Wednesday. Spokespeople for the companies declined to offer further details on the size of the sale.
Read More: BHP’s Iron Ore Output Falls 4% as It Confirms Coal Mine Sale
BHP co-owns the mines, which supply metallurgical coal to steelmakers in markets including China and India, in a 50:50 joint venture with Mitsubishi Corp., and its stakes are worth about $4.2 billion, according to Liberum Capital Ltd. The bidding process for the two mines drew competition from rivals including Indonesia-based mining contractor Bukit Makmur Mandiri Utama PT, Stanmore Resources Ltd. and Peabody Energy Corp.
Since 2021, BHP has announced sales of coal, oil and gas assets in locations including Australia, the US and Colombia under Chief Executive Officer Mike Henry’s strategy to refocus the producer’s portfolio on materials tied to growth in renewable energy, electric vehicles and agriculture. The Melbourne-based company this year completed its biggest deal in more than a decade to add OZ Minerals Ltd. and boost volumes of copper, a key transition metal.
Henry has also focused on shedding costlier mines and argues BHP should only retain its highest-quality metallurgical coal operations which can potentially help customers limit some emissions in the steelmaking process. Royalties on output imposed by Queensland’s government mean the coal mines are unlikely to win major investment in the future, he previously said.
BHP will be the No. 3 supplier of the material after completing the sales and could seek to exit its stakes in remaining assets, Liberum Capital said in a Sept. 20 note.
Read more: BHP Plans to Keep Remaining Coal After Completing Mine Sales
The producer has no current plans to consider sales of other Queensland coking coal operations, Chief Development Officer Johan van Jaarsveld said Oct. 5 in Melbourne.
Shares of BHP rose as much as 0.5% in Sydney on Wednesday, before trading little changed at A$45.59 apiece as at 10:31 a.m. local time. Whitehaven’s shares were halted from trading.
The sale announcement comes as BHP said iron ore production from Western Australia fell 4% in the three months to Sept. 30 from the year-before period. Still, it reaffirmed its total output forecast of the steelmaking material for the full-year that started July 1 at between 282 million to 294 million tons. It also said copper output rose 11% in its first quarter, while metallurgical coal fell 16%.
BHP and closest rival Rio Tinto Group are among the top commodity exporters being closely watched for insight on the economic slowdown in China that’s causing ripple effects across the global economy. The biggest metals-consuming nation’s disappointing post-pandemic recovery and persistent property woes have put downward pressure on steel demand and iron ore prices this year.
(Updates with details of quarterly production output in eighth, ninth paragraphs)
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Key Insights
BHP Group's estimated fair value is AU$60.35 based on 2 Stage Free Cash Flow to Equity
BHP Group's AU$44.25 share price signals that it might be 27% undervalued
The US$45.30 analyst price target for BHP is 25% less than our estimate of fair value
In this article we are going to estimate the intrinsic value of BHP Group Limited (ASX:BHP) by projecting its future cash flows and then discounting them to today's value. Our analysis will employ the Discounted Cash Flow (DCF) model. Believe it or not, it's not too difficult to follow, as you'll see from our example!
Companies can be valued in a lot of ways, so we would point out that a DCF is not perfect for every situation. Anyone interested in learning a bit more about intrinsic value should have a read of the Simply Wall St analysis model.
See our latest analysis for BHP Group
What's The Estimated Valuation?
We're using the 2-stage growth model, which simply means we take in account two stages of company's growth. In the initial period the company may have a higher growth rate and the second stage is usually assumed to have a stable growth rate. To begin with, we have to get estimates of the next ten years of cash flows. Where possible we use analyst estimates, but when these aren't available we extrapolate the previous free cash flow (FCF) from the last estimate or reported value. We assume companies with shrinking free cash flow will slow their rate of shrinkage, and that companies with growing free cash flow will see their growth rate slow, over this period. We do this to reflect that growth tends to slow more in the early years than it does in later years.
Generally we assume that a dollar today is more valuable than a dollar in the future, so we discount the value of these future cash flows to their estimated value in today's dollars:
10-year free cash flow (FCF) forecast
|
2024 |
2025 |
2026 |
2027 |
2028 |
2029 |
2030 |
2031 |
2032 |
2033 |
|
|
Levered FCF ($, Millions) |
US$9.77b |
US$10.1b |
US$9.87b |
US$13.0b |
US$13.3b |
US$13.5b |
US$13.8b |
US$14.1b |
US$14.4b |
US$14.7b |
|
Growth Rate Estimate Source |
Analyst x11 |
Analyst x11 |
Analyst x9 |
Analyst x2 |
Analyst x2 |
Est @ 2.03% |
Est @ 2.03% |
Est @ 2.02% |
Est @ 2.02% |
Est @ 2.02% |
|
Present Value ($, Millions) Discounted @ 8.0% |
US$9.0k |
US$8.7k |
US$7.8k |
US$9.5k |
US$9.0k |
US$8.5k |
US$8.0k |
US$7.6k |
US$7.2k |
US$6.8k |
("Est" = FCF growth rate estimated by Simply Wall St)Present Value of 10-year Cash Flow (PVCF) = US$82b
We now need to calculate the Terminal Value, which accounts for all the future cash flows after this ten year period. For a number of reasons a very conservative growth rate is used that cannot exceed that of a country's GDP growth. In this case we have used the 5-year average of the 10-year government bond yield (2.0%) to estimate future growth. In the same way as with the 10-year 'growth' period, we discount future cash flows to today's value, using a cost of equity of 8.0%.
Terminal Value (TV)= FCF2033 × (1 + g) ÷ (r – g) = US$15b× (1 + 2.0%) ÷ (8.0%– 2.0%) = US$249b
Present Value of Terminal Value (PVTV)= TV / (1 + r)10= US$249b÷ ( 1 + 8.0%)10= US$115b
The total value, or equity value, is then the sum of the present value of the future cash flows, which in this case is US$197b. The last step is to then divide the equity value by the number of shares outstanding. Compared to the current share price of AU$44.3, the company appears a touch undervalued at a 27% discount to where the stock price trades currently. Valuations are imprecise instruments though, rather like a telescope – move a few degrees and end up in a different galaxy. Do keep this in mind.
We would point out that the most important inputs to a discounted cash flow are the discount rate and of course the actual cash flows. You don't have to agree with these inputs, I recommend redoing the calculations yourself and playing with them. The DCF also does not consider the possible cyclicality of an industry, or a company's future capital requirements, so it does not give a full picture of a company's potential performance. Given that we are looking at BHP Group as potential shareholders, the cost of equity is used as the discount rate, rather than the cost of capital (or weighted average cost of capital, WACC) which accounts for debt. In this calculation we've used 8.0%, which is based on a levered beta of 1.202. Beta is a measure of a stock's volatility, compared to the market as a whole. We get our beta from the industry average beta of globally comparable companies, with an imposed limit between 0.8 and 2.0, which is a reasonable range for a stable business.
SWOT Analysis for BHP Group
Strength
Debt is not viewed as a risk.
Dividends are covered by earnings and cash flows.
Weakness
Earnings declined over the past year.
Dividend is low compared to the top 25% of dividend payers in the Metals and Mining market.
Opportunity
Good value based on P/E ratio and estimated fair value.
Threat
Annual earnings are forecast to decline for the next 3 years.
Moving On:
Whilst important, the DCF calculation ideally won't be the sole piece of analysis you scrutinize for a company. The DCF model is not a perfect stock valuation tool. Instead the best use for a DCF model is to test certain assumptions and theories to see if they would lead to the company being undervalued or overvalued. If a company grows at a different rate, or if its cost of equity or risk free rate changes sharply, the output can look very different. Why is the intrinsic value higher than the current share price? For BHP Group, there are three pertinent elements you should further research:
Risks: For example, we've discovered 2 warning signs for BHP Group (1 is concerning!) that you should be aware of before investing here.
Future Earnings: How does BHP's growth rate compare to its peers and the wider market? Dig deeper into the analyst consensus number for the upcoming years by interacting with our free analyst growth expectation chart.
Other High Quality Alternatives: Do you like a good all-rounder? Explore our interactive list of high quality stocks to get an idea of what else is out there you may be missing!
PS. Simply Wall St updates its DCF calculation for every Australian stock every day, so if you want to find the intrinsic value of any other stock just search here.
Have feedback on this article? Concerned about the content? Get in touch with us directly. Alternatively, email editorial-team (at) simplywallst.com.This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
The Australian Securities Exchange (ASX) experienced a broad decline on Tuesday, with the energy sector being the only one to close higher. Local shares fell by almost half a percent as gains in energy were offset by losses across other sectors. The Reserve Bank of Australia's (RBA) September minutes, released on the same day, revealed that board members decided to hold rates steady at the September meeting due to significant increases in interest rates over a short period.
Energy stocks rallied as crude prices continued their upward trend for the third consecutive week, with Brent trading at US$94.80. Chevron (NYSE:CVX)'s Mike Wirth anticipates it reaching $US100 a barrel soon. "Supply is tightening, inventories are drawing … the trends would suggest, we are certainly on our way, we are getting close to $100 a barrel,” Wirth said in an interview on Monday.
Coal stocks also saw an increase after New Hope (OTC:NHPEF) (ASX:NHC), a sector leader, reported an "exceptional" performance across its businesses resulting in a full-year profit of A$1.09 billion. The company also noted that its New Acland stage 3 operations began in May and produced its first coal earlier this month.
Gold stocks surged as bullion prices hit a two-week high due to the easing US dollar ahead of the two-day Federal Reserve meeting starting later on Tuesday. Among these, Newcrest Mining (OTC:NCMGF) (ASX:NCM) advanced after receiving approval from Australia's Foreign Investment Review Board (FIRB) for Colorado-based giant Newmont's planned acquisition.
However, some stocks didn't fare as well. Lithium stocks Pilbara Minerals (ASX:PLS) and Allkem (ASX:AKE), along with payments stock Block Inc (ASX:SQ2), each saw losses of 4%.
Elsewhere in Asia, stocks mainly dropped due to concerns that the Federal Reserve and Bank of England would hike rates this week. The S&P/ASX 200 index fell 0.5% to 7,197 after a 0.7% drop the day before. Heavyweight mining stocks slid, with BHP down 1.4% and Rio Tinto (NYSE:RIO) slipping 0.65%; iron ore futures extended declines on China's higher domestic supply and demand concerns.
In other company news, Orica (ASX:ORI) announced accelerated climate change targets, including a goal to reduce net operational Scope 1 and 2 emissions by at least 45% by 2030, up from its previous target of 40%. The company also aims to reduce Scope 3 emissions by 25% by 2035, from 2022 baseline levels.
Meanwhile, logistics group Qube Holdings (ASX:QUB) saw a decline after disclosing a fatal accident involving an employee at its forestry harvesting operations in the Fleurieu Peninsula on Monday. The company is now working with South Australian Police, SafeWork SA, and other relevant authorities investigating the incident.
This article was generated with the support of AI and reviewed by an editor. For more information see our T&C.
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The Australian shares were set to open lower today, while the U.S. stocks remained largely unchanged with a heightened focus on the outlook for interest rates. ASX futures dipped by 21 points or 0.3% to 7214 around 7 am AEST. On Wall Street, the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq saw minor changes of +0.02%, +0.07%, and +0.01% respectively.
In New York, BHP fell by 0.3%, Rio Tinto (NYSE:RIO) by 0.9%, while Atlassian (NASDAQ:TEAM) gained by 0.9%. Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) shares dropped by 3.3% while Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL)'s shares rose by 1.7% on the back of strong iPhone 15 pre-orders. Amazon (NASDAQ:AMZN) saw a slight dip of 0.3%. The local currency modestly appreciated while the Bloomberg dollar spot index slightly declined.
On the cryptocurrency front, Bitcoin was up by 1.2% to $26,785 at 7.15 am AEST on bitstamp.net after briefly surpassing the $27,000 mark. The yield on the U.S. 10-year note was down by three basis points to 4.30% at 4.59 pm in New York.
The Federal Reserve is expected to maintain rates at 5.25% to 5.5% during its meeting on Wednesday, with nearly a 70% likelihood for another pause in November according to the CME FedWatch Tool.
JPMorgan strategists noted a clear distinction between European rate hikes and an anticipated pause from the Federal Reserve that aligns with earlier decisions made by Bank of Canada and Reserve Bank of Australia. They highlighted a common message across central banks guiding towards a 'high for long' pause.
In other news, Morgan Stanley suggested a portfolio of defensive growth is suitable for a "late cycle" trading market. Russell 'Rusty' Delroy, founder and investment manager of boutique Cottesloe firm Nero Resources Fund, expressed confidence in the oil and gas sector, citing a severe misalignment between company valuations, investor sentiment, and actual supply-demand metrics. He sees value in oil and gas majors like BP (LON:NYSE:BP), which he believes will remain relevant for a long time.
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(Bloomberg) — Private credit funds are considering jumbo loans to help finance bids for coal mines that BHP Group Ltd. is seeking to offload in Australia, people familiar with the matter said.
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The funds are in talks to potentially underwrite financing of $2 billion to $3 billion for competing bids from Indonesian mining contractor Bukit Makmur Mandiri Utama Pt (Buma) and Australian coal producer Stanmore Resources Ltd., according to the people, who asked not to be identified speaking about private matters.
The mines are called Daunia and Blackwater in the northeastern state of Queensland. Buma and Stanmore have made initial bids for at least one of them, the people said. A deal for both mines could be valued at about $5 billion, and the remainder of the financing could be arranged by banks, the people added.
Demand for private credit in Asia and globally has been picking up lately, as the $1.5 trillion market worldwide steps in to help finance deals where banks have often pulled back. In the second quarter globally, 34 new funds raised $71.2 billion, more than double the previous three months, according to data from research firm Preqin. In Asia, where the asset class is still growing from a lower base, firms raised $1.4 billion, up from $180 million in the first quarter.
BHP announced its divestment plan in February for Daunia and Blackwater, which it co-owns with Mitsubishi Corp.
Both Buma and Stanmore have made it through to the next round of bidding, the people said. Whitehaven Coal Ltd. is also still in the running for the mines among others, according to the people.
Stanmore is no stranger to private credit. In November 2021, it tapped $625 million from private credit funds managed by Varde Partners, Canyon Capital Advisors, Farallon Capital Asia Pte, and other credit funds to partially fund its acquisition of BHP’s 80% stake in a coal operation joint venture with Mitsui & Co. in Bowen Basin, Queensland.
The other bidder Buma is already a contractor at the coal mine Blackwater, under a A$540 million contract.
Stanmore, Buma, and Whitehaven declined to comment. BHP didn’t respond to a request for comment on the auction timeline and who made it to the next round of bidding.
–With assistance from James Fernyhough, Rob Verdonck and Davide Scigliuzzo.
(Retops and adds context throughout)
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By Tom Westbrook and Dhara Ranasinghe
SINGAPORE/LONDON (Reuters) – Investors looking for clues about the state of China's economy beyond official data are seeing red warnings flash across a range of informal gauges, prompting many to back out of global assets exposed to the slowdown.
The selling is sucking the wind out of stock markets from London to Bangkok and weighing on China proxies from the Australian dollar to New Zealand dairy prices and shares from luxury goods giant LVMH to miner BHP and casino Las Vegas Sands.
As the post-pandemic period has failed to bring a sustained recovery in consumer spending, or to thaw the near-frozen property market, most analysts now figure the world's second-largest economy is going to miss its 5% growth target this year.
Beneath the headlines, investors are even gloomier with higher-frequency and more arcane data from a shrinking current account surplus to ballooning deposits and soft surveys pointing to a deep-seated confidence problem.
"It's pretty weak," said Sat Duhra, a portfolio manager at Janus Henderson who devises a macro score for countries by tracking seven factors including PMI surveys, real exchange rates, current accounts, growth estimates and liquidity.
"PMIs have been weak, GDP is being revised downward. It's a tricky situation," he said. "And I don't see any point, at this point, in taking a bullish view on China when all of these things are going on."
His fund invests in China, but away from economically sensitive sectors such as banks, property or industrials.
Beyond China, which is the largest trading partner of most of its neighbours and other big economies, souring demand is beginning to take a toll.
New Zealand's Fonterra, the world's biggest dairy exporter, has cut its farm gate milk price forecast twice in a month citing "reduced demand from key importing regions." It previously noted that the largest slowdown was in China.
Last week BHP Group posted its weakest annual profit in three years and manganese-focused spinoff South32 said profit fell by nearly two thirds. New Zealand's a2 Milk Co warned of weak growth in China's infant formula market.
Shares of BHP, S32 and a2 fell.
Seema Shah, chief global strategist at Principal Global Investors in London, sees the slowdown biting in Europe, where investors tend to connect the fortunes of German manufacturers with the those of their Chinese customers.
"We have become a bit more gloomy on Europe," she said, noting China also poses a risk to U.S. equities.
RETREAT
This year's run of bad indicators has wrong-footed investors, who had been positioning for companies such as BHP and currencies such as the Australian dollar and Thai baht to rally as China emerged from the COVID-19 pandemic in a blaze of spending.
Instead, Chinese visitors to top destination Thailand, for example, are barely a third of pre-pandemic levels, the baht is stalled and in Asia only Hong Kong's Hang Seng has fallen further than Thai stocks' 6.5% drop.
Even in Japan, the stock market success story of the year so far, portfolio manager Zuhair Khan at UBP Investments says he's shorting or avoiding companies reliant on China sales.
The scale of the problem, with data showing consumer and producer prices falling and youth unemployment running over 20%, indicates an aggressive policy response is needed, and quickly, he said, something that is so far yet to arrive.
To be sure, although they too have lately retreated, stocks of companies such as casino-operator Las Vegas Sands and luxury-goods seller LVMH are up 11% and 16%, respectively, this year, against a 10% gain for world stocks, and some investors remain bullish.
"We expect group travel to resume in late 2023 and support Chinese spend on luxury goods globally," said Prashant Bhayani, Asia chief investment officer at BNP Paribas Wealth Management.
But it's now a waiting game for valuations to reflect more realistic assumptions.
"The China reopening as a thematic has played out to some extent. However, I think more importantly, it has fallen short of initial expectations," said Jagdeep Ghuman, a portfolio manager for U.S. asset manager Nuveen.
"It’s (now) very much on a case by case basis, driven by valuations. Overall we have seen that reset of expectations play out in the market and so there has been volatility in the shares of these companies."
(Reporting by Tom Westbrook and Rae Wee in Singapore, Dhara Ranasinghe in London and Summer Zhen and Xie Yu in Hong Kong. Editing by Sam Holmes)
Key Insights
Institutions' substantial holdings in BHP Group implies that they have significant influence over the company's share price
45% of the business is held by the top 25 shareholders
Ownership research along with analyst forecasts data help provide a good understanding of opportunities in a stock
A look at the shareholders of BHP Group Limited (ASX:BHP) can tell us which group is most powerful. With 49% stake, institutions possess the maximum shares in the company. That is, the group stands to benefit the most if the stock rises (or lose the most if there is a downturn).
Given the vast amount of money and research capacities at their disposal, institutional ownership tends to carry a lot of weight, especially with individual investors. As a result, a sizeable amount of institutional money invested in a firm is generally viewed as a positive attribute.
Let's take a closer look to see what the different types of shareholders can tell us about BHP Group.
See our latest analysis for BHP Group
ownership-breakdownWhat Does The Institutional Ownership Tell Us About BHP Group?
Institutions typically measure themselves against a benchmark when reporting to their own investors, so they often become more enthusiastic about a stock once it's included in a major index. We would expect most companies to have some institutions on the register, especially if they are growing.
As you can see, institutional investors have a fair amount of stake in BHP Group. This implies the analysts working for those institutions have looked at the stock and they like it. But just like anyone else, they could be wrong. If multiple institutions change their view on a stock at the same time, you could see the share price drop fast. It's therefore worth looking at BHP Group's earnings history below. Of course, the future is what really matters.
BHP Group is not owned by hedge funds. BlackRock, Inc. is currently the company's largest shareholder with 7.1% of shares outstanding. The second and third largest shareholders are State Street Global Advisors, Inc. and The Vanguard Group, Inc., with an equal amount of shares to their name at 5.1%.
Our studies suggest that the top 25 shareholders collectively control less than half of the company's shares, meaning that the company's shares are widely disseminated and there is no dominant shareholder.
Researching institutional ownership is a good way to gauge and filter a stock's expected performance. The same can be achieved by studying analyst sentiments. There are a reasonable number of analysts covering the stock, so it might be useful to find out their aggregate view on the future.
Insider Ownership Of BHP Group
While the precise definition of an insider can be subjective, almost everyone considers board members to be insiders. The company management answer to the board and the latter should represent the interests of shareholders. Notably, sometimes top-level managers are on the board themselves.
Most consider insider ownership a positive because it can indicate the board is well aligned with other shareholders. However, on some occasions too much power is concentrated within this group.
Our most recent data indicates that insiders own less than 1% of BHP Group Limited. As it is a large company, we'd only expect insiders to own a small percentage of it. But it's worth noting that they own AU$60m worth of shares. In this sort of situation, it can be more interesting to see if those insiders have been buying or selling.
General Public Ownership
The general public– including retail investors — own 47% stake in the company, and hence can't easily be ignored. This size of ownership, while considerable, may not be enough to change company policy if the decision is not in sync with other large shareholders.
Next Steps:
I find it very interesting to look at who exactly owns a company. But to truly gain insight, we need to consider other information, too. Be aware that BHP Group is showing 2 warning signs in our investment analysis , and 1 of those is concerning…
If you would prefer discover what analysts are predicting in terms of future growth, do not miss this free report on analyst forecasts.
NB: Figures in this article are calculated using data from the last twelve months, which refer to the 12-month period ending on the last date of the month the financial statement is dated. This may not be consistent with full year annual report figures.
Have feedback on this article? Concerned about the content? Get in touch with us directly. Alternatively, email editorial-team (at) simplywallst.com.This article by Simply Wall St is general in nature. We provide commentary based on historical data and analyst forecasts only using an unbiased methodology and our articles are not intended to be financial advice. It does not constitute a recommendation to buy or sell any stock, and does not take account of your objectives, or your financial situation. We aim to bring you long-term focused analysis driven by fundamental data. Note that our analysis may not factor in the latest price-sensitive company announcements or qualitative material. Simply Wall St has no position in any stocks mentioned.
(Bloomberg) — BHP Group Ltd., the world’s biggest miner, missed analysts’ forecasts as its full-year profit slumped, with China’s struggling economy weighing on demand for iron ore and other commodities.
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Twelve months after posting its highest-ever profit as prices soared, the deteriorating economic outlook in the world’s biggest metals consumer has seen BHP’s earnings from iron ore, copper, coal and nickel recording double-digit percentage declines. Inflation, particularly in labor costs, also put pressure on profits, the company said Tuesday.
BHP’s plunging earnings mirror those posted by iron ore rival Rio Tinto Group last month, with miners holding their breath for an upswing in China’s economy since Beijing abandoned “Covid Zero” restrictions last November.
A slew of recent data suggest steel and iron ore demand could contract for the rest of the year, with the Chinese property market still in a trough, and authorities are unwilling to encourage massive building despite the slowdown reflected in July’s industrial output.
Read More: Solving China’s Steel Demand Mystery: Energy Daily
China’s near-term outlook was “contingent on the effectiveness of recent policy measures,” Chief Executive Officer Mike Henry said in a statement Tuesday, adding he expected “buoyant growth in India with strong construction activity underpinning an expansion in steelmaking capacity.”
BHP’s underlying attributable profit from continuing operations fell to $13.4 billion in the 12 months to June 2023, the Melbourne-based company said in a regulatory filing. It will pay a final dividend of 80 cents per share, compared with $1.75 the year before.
Still, BHP said it expects China steel production to reach more than 1 billion tons this calendar year, as it did last year. But in the medium term, “China’s demand for iron ore is expected to be lower than it is today as it moves beyond its crude steel production plateau and the scrap-to-steel ratio rises,” it said in the report.
Henry said on a media call Tuesday that he expected China’s economy to “pick up toward the back end of this year.” New-start property development was the biggest drag on steel demand, but “there’s many parts of the Chinese economy that are actually running quite well,” including green technology and the automotive sector.
BHP has put “future facing commodities” copper, nickel and potash at the center of its growth plans, driven by population growth, urbanization and the clean energy transition. Henry said capital expenditure would increase to around $10 billion in the current financial year, up from $7.1 billion last year, as the company invests more in these minerals.
The miner said it’s studying increasing annual iron ore production from its Australian operations to 330 million tons a year, up from 257 million tons now. BHP gave no update on the progress of the sale of two coal mines in Australia’s Queensland state.
(Updates with steel production forecast in seventh paragraph; iron ore expansion plans in ninth)
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(Bloomberg) — There’s a three-way battle underway for the title of the world’s biggest copper producer.
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After buying Australia’s OZ Minerals Ltd., BHP Group is challenging for the mantle at a time when hitherto leader Codelco has seen output slide as it battles to overhaul aging operations in Chile. In fact, the Melbourne-based firm produced more than Codelco last quarter.
“The risk is if Codelco doesn’t pick up production in 2024 and BHP does, then they could overtake the mighty Codelco” in annual terms, said Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Grant Sporre.
Freeport-McMoRan Inc. briefly moved into first spot last year as it ramped up underground mining in Indonesia, although the US firm has seen its share of output fall after handing over half that asset as a condition for signing a new contract. Sporre has Freeport in third in the years ahead, with Codelco just staving off BHP for the crown.
In a presentation Friday, Codelco’s outgoing CEO Andre Sougarret delivered a trajectory that more or less matched Sporre’s forecasts (see chart below). Still, Codelco has been missing targets for years amid project delays that expose it to even lower quality ore.
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(Bloomberg) — BHP Group Ltd., South32 Ltd. and a unit of Seriti Resources Holdings Ltd. may face a class action from coal miners with lung disease in South Africa who worked at the companies’ operations over the last six decades.
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Richard Spoor, a South African lawyer who has won compensation for gold and asbestos miners with lung disease, filed a case with the country’s High Court on Tuesday seeking permission to launch a class action.
The Southern African Bishops Conference initiated the case and will seek relief for miners who have worked at the operations since 1965 and their descendants, Spoor’s legal firm said in a statement.
“Every breath can be a struggle in the life of a coal miner suffering from coal-mine lung disease,” Spoor’s firm said. “Miners far too often walk away with incurable lung diseases that require life-long treatments they cannot afford. Many have tragically lost their lives.”
The case is the latest attempt to win compensation for miners and communities in southern Africa affected by the operations they worked at or lived near at times of laxer environmental standards. The papers were filed on behalf of 17 miners.
Spoor has won compensation for asbestos miners who worked for now-defunct South African mining titan, Gencor Ltd., and gold miners who worked for companies including Anglo American Plc. Anglo is facing a separate suit over alleged lead poisoning near a mine in Zambia.
“South32 can confirm it has been served with an application for certification of a class action on behalf of certain mine workers at coal mines in South Africa,” the company, which ran coal mines in the country between 2015 and 2021, said in a response to queries. “This matter is currently being considered by the business. We are unable to comment further.”
BHP, which spun off South32, said it’s yet to receive the claim and hasn’t held mining interests in South Africa since spinning off South32 in 2015. It may respond once it has assessed the claim, the company said.
Seriti didn’t respond to queries.
Motley Rice LLC will act as a legal consultant to the miners.
(Updates with South32 comment in eighth paragraph)
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Rio Tinto RIO will build the largest solar power plant in Canada’s northern territories at its Diavik Diamond Mine. This move aligns with RIO’s global decarbonization objectives, which include a 15% reduction in Scope 1 & 2 emissions by 2025, and 50% by 2030. The company has made a commitment to reach net-zero emissions by 2050.The plant will feature more than 6,600 solar panels. In addition to direct sunlight, the bi-facial panels will help generate energy from the light that reflects off the snow which covers Diavik for most of the year.The solar power plant, which is expected to be fully operational in the first half of 2024, will add to Diavik’s renewable energy generation, which already features a wind-diesel hybrid power facility with a capacity of 55.4 MW powering the site. The solar plant is expected to generate around 4,200 megawatt-hours of carbon-free electricity annually for the mine. It will provide up to 25% of Diavik’s electricity during closure work, which will continue till 2029. It will cut diesel consumption at the site by approximately one million liters per year. It will also help lower emissions by 2,900 tons of CO2 equivalent, which is almost same as eliminating the emissions of 630 cars.The Diavik mine, which is fully owned by Rio Tinto, is Canada’s largest diamond producer with an annual production capacity of 3.5 to 4.5 million carats of rough diamonds per annum. The mine started operating in 2003 and produced over 100 million carats of diamonds ever since. Commercial production is expected to end in the first quarter of 2026.In 2022, the company’s Scope 1 and 2 emissions were 30.3Mt CO2e, which was down 2% year over year and marked a reduction of 7% from its 2018 baseline. In the first half of fiscal 2023, RIO’s Scope 1 and 2 emissions were 15.4 Mt CO2e, 1% lower than the last year’s comparable period. The company has spent $95 million on decarbonization projects in the said period.Rio Tinto plans to invest $7.5 billion in capital between 2022 and 2030 to deliver on its decarbonization strategy. The company has made some advancements in its sustainability efforts during the first half of fiscal 2023. Among these, in April 2023, Rio Tinto Iron and Titanium started BlueSmeltingTM demonstration plant at its metallurgical complex in Sorel-Tracy. This is a part of the process to validate the ground-breaking BlueSmeltingTM technology, which aims to decarbonize RTIT's Quebec Operations. The project is part of a partnership between Rio Tinto and the Government of Canada to invest up to C$737 million ($537 million) over the next eight years to decarbonize the Sorel-Tracy facility and to position the business as a center of excellence in critical minerals processing.In June, Rio Tinto announced that its Boron, CA operation has started operating with a fleet running on renewable diesel. This makes it the first open pit mine in the world to manage this feat. Also, during the month, the company signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) with China Baowu, to explore a range of industry-leading new projects in China and Australia in a bid to decarbonize the steel value chain.
Miners are bringing about radical changes to mining operations with the help of technology and automation to increase productivity and efficiency, reduce costs and improve frontline safety. More importantly, these efforts will help the industry reach its sustainability target by cutting down on carbon emissions, which is the need of the hour considering the severity of climate change.BHP Group BHP recently signed a MoU with Toyota Australia, the Australian subsidiary of the Japanese car manufacturer Toyota TM to enhance safety measures and reduce CO2 emissions at the former’s Australian operations. Toyota’s expertise will aid BHP's progress toward its objective to reduce greenhouse gas emissions by 30% by 2030.To decarbonize its operations, BHP has plans to electrify its fleet of 5000 light vehicles in Australia.Vale S.A VALE has also set target to reduce Scopes 1 and 2 absolute greenhouse gas emissions by 33% by 2030, and achieve net zero Scopes 1 and 2 emissions by 2050. Till 2022, Vale has achieved a reduction of 27% in CO2 emissions, compared with the 2017 base levels.Earlier this year, Vale successfully tested a new type of iron ore briquette, adapted for the direct reduction route. This marks a solid breakthrough as it will aid the steel industry's efforts to achieve emission reduction targets. The new type of briquette emits about 80% less CO2 compared to pellets in its manufacture. The briquette can also be used as a charge for the blast furnace.
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July 31 (Reuters) – The following are the top stories in the Financial Times. Reuters has not verified these stories and does not vouch for their accuracy.
Headlines
– BHP expects Indian steelmaking boom to drive its coal business
– UK's nuclear power ambitions for 2050 lack clear plan, say MPs
– UK government cuts cost of polluting in latest anti-green move
– UK needs to step up engagement with Africa on security, says foreign secretary
Overview
– BHP Group's chief commercial officer Vandita Pant has said the rapid expansion of India's steel industry is expected to boost the miner's coal business significantly.
– The British government's goal to more than triple its nuclear power generation capacity by 2050 lacks of a strategic plan to achieve it, according to a report by lawmakers on the House of Commons science, innovation and technology committee.
– The UK government has made it cheaper to pollute in Britain compared with the European Union, by watering down reforms to the carbon market, including offering more allowances than expected to polluting industries.
– British foreign minister James Cleverly has said that the country needs to increase its engagement with African nations on "genuinely sustainable security measures", acknowledging that some countries have turned to the Wagner group to meet an "unfulfilled need".
(Compiled by Bengaluru newsroom)
(Bloomberg) — BHP Group Ltd. is calling for Australia to lift a longstanding ban on nuclear power as the country moves to decarbonize its electricity system.
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Nuclear “must be part of the conversation” in Australia, Laura Tyler, chief technical officer at the world’s biggest miner, said in an interview on Wednesday.
“To make sure we have that safe, reliable energy mix, we need to be able to mix it up” with nuclear complementing wind, solar, batteries and other sources of electricity, she said. “Everything needs to be on the table.”
The bulk of BHP’s earnings come from its Australian iron ore and coal mines, but the company also produces uranium, the fuel for nuclear reactors, at its Olympic Dam site in South Australia.
After being shunned due to safety concerns, nuclear energy is enjoying a resurgence in global popularity due to a shortage of natural gas following Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The need to decarbonize electricity grids and the development of smaller and cheaper reactors is also making it more attractive.
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Australia has never had nuclear power and there’s been a prohibition on its use in place since the 1990s. The Labor government supports the ban, arguing the country’s wealth of renewable resources means it’s not needed.
However, the opposition Liberal-National coalition wants it overturned, on the grounds that wind, solar and batteries can’t provide reliable baseload power to replace coal plants that are being phased out.
BHP aims to get to net zero across its operations by 2050, but warned last week that its emissions might rise in the short term.
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(Bloomberg) — Iron ore rallied along with copper after Chinese Premier Li Qiang said that growth has picked up this quarter and more stimulus was in store, boosting the outlook for consumption in the biggest metals importer.
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China will roll out more practical, effective measures to expand domestic demand and stoke market vitality, Premier Li told the World Economic Forum in Tianjin. Iron ore, used to make steel, surged by almost 4%.
In addition, Mike Henry, head of BHP Group Ltd., the world’s largest miner, urged the Chinese government to provide more help for the housing market, acknowledging recent data had been patchy. “We do think there’s room for a little bit more policy that is supportive,” he told reporters in Brisbane.
Industrial metals rallied at the start of the year as China reopened after Covid Zero was ditched, but the upswing stalled this quarter as manufacturing and the property market disappointed. While the central bank cut policy rates this month to aid the economy, investors expect more steps will follow, although it’s unclear if they’ll be enough to significantly revive growth.
“Once again, unbridled expectations of further stimulatory interventions are running rife,” said Atilla Widnell, managing director at Navigate Commodities Pte, “We fully expect intermittent upside price shocks to emanate from overly optimistic China and iron ore bulls, though bears will likely use this as an opportunity to sell.”
Iron ore traded 3.8% higher at $113.15 a ton in Singapore at 2:17 p.m., while steel futures in China also climbed. On the London Metal Exchange, copper gained 0.9% to $8,466 a ton as aluminum, zinc, lead, tin and nickel all rose more than 1%. For nickel, the day’s gain came after it closed on Monday at the lowest level since July 2022.
Copper’s upside potential was also in focus after an especially bullish, long-term forecast from billionaire Robert Friedland, who said that prices could ultimately rally tenfold as the global mining industry struggled to meet accelerating demand given the energy transition.
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(Bloomberg) — BHP Group Ltd. Chief Executive Officer Mike Henry has warned too much government intervention in global critical minerals supply chains could undermine efforts to fight climate change.
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The boss of the world’s biggest mining company said it was “understandable” that nations were scrambling to secure domestic supply of the metals needed in renewable energy and electric vehicles, but warned against an excessively domestic focus and over-reliance on the “sugar hit” of state-provided subsidies.
“Governments striving to secure their own critical mineral supplies must ensure they don’t undermine the outcome the world needs to achieve – where in fact a combination of pragmatic international cooperation and competition can jointly accelerate the energy transition,” Henry said a conference in Brisbane on Tuesday.
Australia Cautious on Chinese Investment in Vital Lithium Sector
Henry’s warning comes as global competition for minerals such as lithium, nickel, cobalt and rare earths continues to heat up as nations and industry rush to meet ambitious emissions reduction goals. China controls a large chunk of supply chains of these minerals, which has worried the US, Europe and other economies.
The US Inflation Reduction Act, legislated last year, set aside almost $400 billion to subsidize clean energy, and the US has set up partnerships with allies, including key miner Australia, to build critical mineral supply chains that exclude China.
While Henry didn’t explicitly criticize these efforts in his speech, he said any moves to mimic the new law in a smaller country like Australia would be “a losing proposition.”
“What governments here – federal and state – should focus on are those things within their control to make investment fundamentally more attractive,” he said.
Meanwhile, Henry also urged the Chinese government to provide more support for the struggling housing market, which is a major driver of steel demand, acknowledging recent economic data from the nation was “a little patchy.”
China Economy Gloom Worsens With Weak Consumer Spending Data
“We do think there’s room for a little bit more policy that is supportive of housing and housing new starts,” he told reporters after the speech. Still, he remained optimistic about the outlook for steel and iron ore demand, saying: “Our expectation remains that the second half will be stronger than the first.”
(Updates with Henry’s China housing comments from penultimate paragraph)
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(Bloomberg) — BHP Group Ltd. is warning its carbon emissions will rise in the short term, with rapid technological advances and industrial collaboration needed if the mining giant is to reach its goal of net zero emissions by 2050.
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The world’s biggest miner is on track to meet its target of a 30% reduction in operational emissions by 2030 at a cost of around $4 billion, it said Wednesday. Still, it expects a “near-term increase in emissions from production growth” from current levels, Graham Winkelman, the group’s head of carbon management, said in an investor briefing.
Carbon reduction technologies “must advance quickly from where it is now” and needs to include collaborations “with our vendors and industry,” BHP said in a presentation. The Melbourne-based company’s path to net zero would be “non-linear,” it added, with emissions rising before falling again by the end of the decade.
What It Would Take to Make Steelmaking Greener: QuickTake
The major iron ore, coal and copper producer plans to reduce its operational (Scope 1 and 2) greenhouse gas emissions by at least 30% on 2020 figures by 2030, and reach net zero in those emissions by 2050. Those targets don’t include “Scope 3” emissions, including those from end-users such as steelmakers and other customers.
The admission of short-term increases in emissions from BHP comes even as its environmental targets remain less ambitious than those of its peers. Rio Tinto Group, which is a bigger emitter, aims to reduce its Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 50% by 2030 from a 2018 baseline, while Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. is aiming to reach net zero by that year.
Around 75% of the $4 billion that BHP plans to spend on decarbonization by 2030 will be spent on replacing diesel use in haul trucks. It favors battery-powered haul trucks over hydrogen power because they are more than twice as efficient, Anna Wiley, the vice president of planning and technical in the company’s Australian minerals division, said on the conference call.
‘Dynamic Charging’
BHP will trial “dynamic charging” at its mines in Western Australia and Chile, allowing trucks to be charged while they are still in operation. It said its unfinished Jansen potash mine in Canada, which is due to start producing the fertilizer ingredient in 2026, would use 80% electric haul trucks from day one.
The company’s Australian iron ore mines are not connected to the grid and are powered by purpose-built gas generators. A switch to electric haul trucks will see power demand surge, and BHP plans to build 500 megawatts of renewables and storage to meet growing demand and decarbonize its electricity emissions, it said. It will also explore options for plugging into to a wider regional grid.
BHP’s coal mines in Queensland are the single biggest emitters in its Australian operations, producing almost half its pollution. Around a third of that comes from methane escaping from the coal seams, Wiley said.
It aims to capture about 50% of that methane and use it to generate electricity or sell to third parties, and said it was “exploring” options for the rest, adding that carbon offsets would likely be needed.
Still, of the $4 billion it plans to spend on decarbonization by 2030, BHP allocated a negligible amount to methane, with diesel, electricity and gas emissions the main targets. The company’s Western Australian iron ore division will be the biggest recipient of decarbonization investment between now and 2030, followed by the Escondida copper mine in Chile, it said.
(Updates with haul truck plans in 6th, 7th paragraphs)
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