Rio Tinto sees tight coking coal, copper markets in 2012

Rio Tinto, the world’s third-largest miner, said it sees coking coal and copper markets remaining tight, while margins were being squeezed in aluminium.

“Demand for commodities in 2012 will be supported by a through-the-year improvement in global growth, although we cannot rule out periods of volatility similar to those in 2011,” Rio Tinto’s chief economist, Vivek Tulpule, said in slides prepared for a presentation in Sydney.

He maintained Rio Tinto’s outlook that economic growth in China would remain above 8 percent in 2012.

As a result, the market for coal used in steel making “remains tightly balanced”, the slides said, with countries outside China helping to pump up demand in 2012 and 2013.

The “copper market remains tight despite supply growth”, the slide presentation said, with the company anticipating rising costs and supply disruptions to continue, following strikes last year.

Rio Tinto, which is looking to sell most of its Australia and New Zealand aluminium business, remains bearish on the aluminium market, with smelters facing a margin squeeze as costs rise and aluminium prices remain weak.

“But the global bauxite market is growing rapidly” with Chinese imports of bauxite from Indonesia taking off.

Rio Tinto earlier this week reiterated it expects the global iron ore market to remain in deficit even after massive expansions by top iron ore miner Vale, Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton, as smaller miners’ projects were running into delays.

Comments

  1. coal publications would suggest the commodity isn't going anywhere. Coal reports show if we have to live with it, we may as well reduce the impact of coal and CCS seems to be the best solution found to date. Cherry www.coalportal.com While for some an ideal world would see no reliance on coal industry to produce electricity,

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