Analysts queue up to downgrade iron ore forecasts
Turmoil in the iron ore markets sent analysts scurrying to downgrade their respective forecasts on Monday.
Anglo American
2,318.00p
17:15 18/11/24
Antofagasta
1,680.00p
17:15 18/11/24
BHP Group Limited NPV (DI)
2,061.00p
17:15 18/11/24
FTSE 100
8,109.32
16:35 18/11/24
FTSE 250
20,395.41
17:09 18/11/24
FTSE 350
4,473.50
17:09 18/11/24
FTSE All-Share
4,431.13
16:49 18/11/24
Industrial Metals & Mining
6,051.15
17:09 18/11/24
Lonmin
75.60p
11:03 14/06/19
Mining
10,989.78
17:09 18/11/24
Vedanta Resources
832.60p
16:35 28/09/18
The iron ore price has been declining for close to 12 months on concerns about oversupply and lacklustre demand from China. Spot prices slumped below $50 per tonne earlier this month dropping 1.7% to $47.53 per tonne on 10 April.
Given ongoing cost deflation, producer FX tailwinds, loss tolerance and closure costs - amongst other factors - UBS slashed its long-term 2020 price forecast by 27% to $55 per dry metric tonne. The Swiss broker also cut its 2015-19 iron ore forecasts by 20-30% to $48-55 per tonne and the long-term price by $20 per tonne to $55.
Ratings agency S&P lowered its price assumptions for iron ore to $45 per tonne for the rest of 2015, to $50 for 2016 and $55 for 2017. Meanwhile, analysts at Citigroup cut their short and medium-term outlook for the price of the red metal, which they now expect to average $45 per tonne in 2015 and $40 per tonne in 2016, staying at that level until the end of 2018.
Those projections were in sharp contrast with Citi’s previous forecasts of $58, $62 and $73 for 2015, 2016 and 2017, respectively. Last week, Credit Suisse said it expected the iron ore price to average $45 per tonne in the second half of 2015 and the first two quarters of 2016.
Earlier this year, Deutsche Bank predicted a sub-$40 level before the price finds a floor. The flurry of recent downgrades hit mining stocks hard on Monday. At 15:40 BST RioTinto (down 0.78%), BHP Billiton (down 3.21%), Lonmin (down 3.23%), Antofagasta (down 2.50%) and Anglo American down (2.33%) were all in the red.
Following the lowering of their iron ore forecast, analysts at Citi noted: “On the large cap stocks we have moved to a ‘neutral’ recommendation on BHP Billiton, Glencore and Rio Tinto, and we move to a ‘sell’ recommendation on Anglo American and Vedanta.”
Citi analysts also downgraded Gem Diamonds and Lonmin to ‘neutral’.
In parallel, S&P placed its rated mining companies – i.e. Anglo American, BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto, Fortescue Metals Group, Vale, Exxaro Resources and CAP – on ratings watch with a negative outlook.