Iron ore miners face the prospect of the first price cut in seven years as steel production in China and elsewhere plunges amid the global downturn.
After an
informal meeting last week at a conference in the Chinese city of Quingdao, traders and bankers said a cut of 10 to 20 per cent was a likely
outcome of the formal negotiations, due to begin in November, for annual contracts.
However, these people warned that chaotic global economic conditions made any
forecast highly tentative.
After this year's record 85 per cent jump in iron ore prices, a price reduction would damp the cost of cars, machinery and construction materials, contributing to lower inflationary pressures just as central banks slash rates.
Bankers said a price cut would only make a small dent in
mining groups' revenues as ore prices have jumped more than 300 per cent in the past five years.
Any cut would be the first reduction since iron ore prices fell 2.4 per cent in 2002, when the global economy slowed in the wake of the dotcom bubble.
The first formal contacts of the secretive - and often acrimonious - annual negotiations will take place between Chinese steel millers led by Baosteel and miners Vale of Brazil, Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton.
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