FMG offers bigger discounts for May deliveries

Australia’s Fortescue Metal Group (FMG) has agreed on bigger discounts with certain Chinese customers for its May deliveries, as seaborne supplies continue to increase.

Paragraph entered by Atlantic migration, in order for SteelFirst articles to display correctly on Metal Bulletin.

Concessions for 58.3% Fe Fortescue Blend will be increased to 4.5%, while those for 56.5% Fe Super Special Fines will rise to 7.5%, up one percentage point each from the discounts in April, a mill source in northern China told Steel First on Wednesday April 16.

The source said some of FMG’s larger clients had agreed the discounts with the miner, and more are expected to agree on the deduction.

“The miner is currently placing priority on market share rather than profit margins,” she added.

The company has been steadily increasing discounts over the past few months, except for February when China observed a week-long Chinese New Year holiday.

The discount was 1.5% in January and February, 2% in March and 3.5% in April for Fortescue Blend; and 1.5% in December 2013, 4% in January and February, 5% in March and 6.5% in April for Super Special Fines, market participants told Steel First.

“Increasing seaborne supply from FMG’s own mine expansions as well as from its peers in Australia adds pressure to the market,” an iron ore trader in Beijing said.

FMG and BHP Billiton commenced production at their respective 40 million-tpy Kings Mine and 35 million-tpy Jimblebar project in Western Australia in the March quarter.

FMG shipped 31.5 million tonnes of iron ore during the period, up 13% from the previous quarter and up 56% year-on-year, the company said on Wednesday.

What to read next
Steel producers in the United States remain optimistic about construction demand despite its lackluster short-term outlook, according to market participants
The influential annual treatment and refining charge (TC/RC) benchmark that sets the price that smelters charge miners to process their copper concentrate could be at risk, according to multiple market sources, although most believe the system, or elements of it, will remain
Caroline Messecar, strategic markets editor for Fastmarkets, explores the world of rare earth prices in her opinion piece for ‘The Crucible’ titled ‘Why have rare earth prices fallen?’
After a consultation period, Fastmarkets has amended the pricing frequency of its MB-STE-0141 steel billet import, cfr Manila, $/tonne, price assessment from a daily basis to twice per week.
The publication of the following prices was delayed on Tuesday April 30 due to technical issues. Fastmarkets’ pricing database has been updated.
Fastmarkets launches MB-NI-0256 nickel low-carbon briquette premium, cif global, $/tonne, on Wednesday May 1.