Suppliers' strong influence
This year's 9.5 percent price increase is
expected to be absorbed through freight.
But experts warned the "leading
position" in the 2007 negotiations does not mean everything.
Another
price increase after rises over four consecutive years implied that suppliers
still enjoy a stronger influence on the global market than buyers, said Xu
Xiangchun, an analyst with Beijing Langesteel Information Consultation.
The three
largest suppliers, CVRD from Brazil and Australia's BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto,
control over 70 percent of the global iron ore trade.
When sellers talked
about increasing capacity, the Australian firms had no plan to expand capacity
in the near future.
Meanwhile, China's imports are expected to grow 9.2
percent this year. The Chinese steel-making industry is taking steps to reduce
its dependence on these major miners.
Steelmakers and trading companies
have had to apply for iron ore import licenses since 2005 to cut China's iron
ore importers from 523 in 2004 to 118. The number is expected to decrease
further this year as the import rules are tightened.
Official figures
show large domestic mines produced 521 million tons of iron ore in the first 11
months of 2006, up 38.2 percent year-on-year, easing the tight market situation.
A
number of steelmakers moved their factories to port cities last year to lower
transport costs.
Shanghai Baosteel has built a new steel factory in the
southern city of Zhanjiang. Wuhan Iron and Steel Corp has built a modern iron
and steel works in Fangchenggang, also in South China.
Angang Steel Co
has new plants in Yingkou in Northeast China. And another steel giant, Shougang
Group based in Beijing, will complete its massive relocation to Tangshan, Hebei Province, by the end of 2010.
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