great expectations: the upcoming rationalisation of metals supply shaun browne, chairman, ame group

32
Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Upload: armani-quail

Post on 29-Mar-2015

219 views

Category:

Documents


2 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals

supply

Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Page 2: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Great Expectations: Metals Supply and Political Economics

Shaun Browne

AME GroupOctober 2013

London, New York, Hong Kong, Beijing, Sydney

Page 3: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Relationship Support Research Engineering

London New York

Hong Kong Beijing Sydney

Engineering Economics – AME Group

Page 4: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

AME Group Supply & Value Chain

Advanced Exploration• Geological Modelling to Prefeasibility

Project Development• Feasibility Studies to Commissioning

Production• Completion test, Debottlenecking, Expansions

Infrastructure & Transport Logistics• Ports, rail, barges, shipping & trucking

Beneficiation• Smelters, Refineries, Steel Mills, Hydrometallurgical/Pyrometallurgical.

General Commercial Marketing• Trading, Sales, Contracts

Manufacturing• Company Demand, Specifications

End User Analysis• Consumer real demand (not apparent demand)

Page 5: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Taking stock: The supply perspective

Aluminium: The new supply and technology war

Copper: A different type of squeeze

Nickel: Market consolidation and a shift to the East

Zinc: Restrictions or exercising restraint?

Agenda – Is this political economics?

Page 6: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

The composition of growth is good news for a cyclical uplift in metals demand

Japanese Industrial Production and Copper Demand, 1979 - 2012

US Industrial Production and Copper Demand, 1964 - 2012

Source: AME

A recovery in construction from low levels will provide a welcome lift for metals in the Atlantic Economies

-30%

-20%

-10%

0%

10%

20%

30%

1979 1982 1985 1988 1991 1994 1997 2000 2003 2006 2009 2012

Japan Industrial Production % ch p.a.Japan Copper demand % ch p.a.

% ch. p.a.

-40%

-30%

-20%

-10%

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

1964

1967

1970

1973

1976

1979

1982

1985

1988

1991

1994

1997

2000

2003

2006

2009

2012

US IP % ch p.a. US Copper demand % ch. P.a.

% ch. p.a.

Construction drivenIP Driven

Page 7: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Taking stock: The supply perspective

Aluminium: The new supply and technology war

Copper: A different type of squeeze

Nickel: Market consolidation and a shift to the East

Zinc: Restrictions or exercising restraint?

Agenda – Is this political economics?

Page 8: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Aluminium:The supply and technology war

Page 9: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

New supply holding prices under $1,800/t in the third quarter of 2013

Aluminium Projects scheduled to be commissioned in 2013

Source: AME

Oversupply means not all projects will commission as scheduled

Project New/Expansion Company Country Capacity  (kt) LikelihoodMahan New Hindalco Industries India 360 CommittedMa'aden New Alcoa and Saudi Arabian Mining Saudi Arabia 740 CommittedBoguchansk (BEMO) New RUSAL Russia 300 CommittedTaishet (Irkutsk) New RUSAL Russia 100 CommittedHuimin New China Hongqiao Group China 240 CommittedPress Metal Bintulu New Press Metal Malaysia 300 CommittedChongqing Qineng New Chongqing Qineng Aluminium China 340 CommittedChongqing Tiantai New Chongqing Tiantai Aluminium China 100 CommittedCPIC Mongolia Jinlian New CPIC Mongolia Jinlian China 500 CommittedGansu Dongxing New Gansu Dongxing Aluminium China 550 CommittedQinghai West New Qinghai West Hydropow er China 300 CommittedXinjiang Tianlong New Xinjiang Tianlong Aluminum China 100 CommittedXinjiang Xinfa New Xinjiang Xinfa China 800 CommittedTianshan New Tianshan Aluminum China 300 CommittedXinjiang Shenhuo New Xinjiang Shenhuo China 400 CommittedXinjiang Dongfang Xiw ang New Xinjiang Dongfang Xiw ang China 400 CommittedXinjiang Jiarun New Xinjiang Jiarun China 50 CommittedZunyi Weiming New Zunyi Weiming Aluminum China 40 CommittedGuangxi Suyuan Xinshan New Guangxi Suyuan Xinshan China 200 CommittedLintao New Lintao Aluminium China 100 CommittedXinfa Xinjiang New Shandong Chiping Xinfa Xinjiang China 500 CommittedArvida Expansion Rio Tinto Alcan Canada 60 CommittedSumgait Expansion DETAL Azerbaijan 50 CommittedHirakud Expansion Hindalco Industries India 50 CommittedBalco Expansion Vedanta Resources India 325 CommittedXinjiang Tianshan Expansion Xinjiang Tianshan Aluminium China 140 CommittedTotal 7345

Page 10: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Chinese committed supply next year is breathtaking – more production cuts coming

Aluminium Projects expected to be commissioned in 2014

Source: AME

More project commissioning deferrals will be announced

New Aluminium centre of the world – Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region

Project Company Country Capacity  (kt)Xining Sanmexia Tianyuan China 500Aditya Al Hindalco Industries India 360Kitimat Rio Tinto Alcan Canada 420Boguchansk RUSAL Russia 300Chalco Xinjiang Chalco China 1000Chongqing Qineng Chongqing Qineng Aluminium China 160Tianjin Jinhe Tianjin Jinhe China 300Qinghai Qinghai Industry Investment China 300Xinjiang Tianlong Xinjiang Tianlong Aluminum China 200Tianshan Tianshan Aluminum China 300Xinjiang Shenhuo Xinjiang Shenhuo China 400Xinjiang Dongfang Xiw ang Xinjiang Dongfang Xiw ang China 400Xinjiang Jiarun Xinjiang Jiarun China 500Guangxi Suyuan Xinshan Guangxi Suyuan Xinshan China 100Ganja DETAL Azerbaijan 50Huimin China Hongqiao Group China 240Zouping China Hongqiao Group China 240Jharsuguda Vedanta Resources India 1250EMAL Dubai Aluminium Abu Dhabi 500Total 7520

Page 11: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Proposed smelting capacity in China would eclipse current global capacity by 2017

Source: AME

Estimated Chinese Aluminium Smelting Capacity 2000 – 2015

We do not expect any new capacity to be commissioned in the West which is not already under construction

3,000 3,6004,358

5,5636,837

7,8069,350

12,559 13,180 12,964

16,13117,786

19,72221,260 21,260 21,260

6,006

15,239

23,456

2,631 1,616

6,54110,848

10,550

8,795

0

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

25,000

30,000

35,000

40,000

45,000

50,000

2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

kt

Pending capacity expected from new builds Forecast AL from Domestic ALA/Domestic BX

Forecast AL metal from Domestic ALA/Imported BX Forecast AL from Imported ALA

2013 World production

Page 12: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Aluminium production of the future will be a technology war

Soderberg vs Pre-bake technology

Source: AME

Typical size vs power for reduction pots

Chinese producers are winning the war…for now…

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

25%

30%

35%

40%

<200 200-299kA 300-399kA 400-499kA >500kA

China

Non-China

11.5

12.0

12.5

13.0

13.5

14.0

14.5

15.0

15.5

16.0

16.5

17.0

17.5

18.0

18.5

19.0

0.0 0.5 1.0 1.5 2.0 2.5 3.0 3.5 4.0

Po

we

r E

ffic

ien

cy

(D

C k

Wh

/kg

)

Tonnes of metal per pot per day

Existing high production pots

Soderberg technology

VSS

HSS

Prebake technology

Page 13: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Soderberg capacity will experience faster obsolescence than previously expected

Soderberg vs Pre-bake Smelter Technology for Key Aluminium Producers (Includes affiliated smelters)

Source: AME

The question is now when the next step change in technology will be

0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100%

2013

2000

2013

2000

2013

2000

2013

2000

2013

2000

Pre-bake Soderberg

RUSAL

RioTinto Alcan

Norsk Hydro

Chalco

Alcoa

Page 14: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Taking stock: The supply perspective

Aluminium: The new supply and technology war

Copper: A different type of squeeze

Nickel: Market consolidation and a shift to the East

Zinc: Restrictions or exercising restraint?

Agenda – Is this political economics?

Page 15: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Copper:A different type of squeeze

Page 16: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Copper smelting cost and energy consumption for different smelting technologies

• Reverberatory and Noranda furnaces are high energy consumers resulting in high cost of production

• Older technology progressively being replaced with Bath and Mitsubishi smelters

o Cheaper cost of production

o Better emission capture

o Flash capex high

• No reverberatory technology built since the fall of the iron curtain

Smelter technology costs and energy consumption rates

A shift to cleaner, lower cost technologies will increase capex requirements for the base metals smelting industry

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

$0

$100

$200

$300

$400

$500

$600

$700

$800

Bath Flash Mitsubishi Noranda Reverb

GJ/t Cu$/t Cu

Smelting cost $/t anode (LHS)

Energy Consumption, GJ/t anode (RHS)

Page 17: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Sulphur dioxide and acid plants will be a medium term defining feature for smelters

Page 18: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

The changing environmental landscape changing competitive landscape for base metals smelter

Average SO2 Daily Emission Limits (μg/m3) 2013

Tighter emission standards will generally cause refits, not closures

Source: AME

0

50

100

150

200

250

300

350

400

Rus

sia

Per

u

Jap

an

Arm

enia

Aus

tria

Bel

giu

m

Bul

gar

ia

Fin

land

Ger

man

y

Po

land

Ro

man

ia

Slo

vak …

So

uthe

r Afr

ica

Sp

ain

Sw

eden

Zam

bia

EU

Zo

ne

Ko

rea

Ser

bia

Ukr

aine

Ind

ia

Phi

lipp

ines

Aus

tral

ia

Chi

le

Chi

na

Thai

land

Can

ada

Mex

ico

Bra

zil

Ind

one

sia

Iran

Kaz

akhs

tan

Nam

ibia

Om

an

US

A

Uzb

ekis

tan

μg/m3

WHO Limit

Page 19: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Despite better TCs, supply chain margins will sit with concentrate producers

Copper Smelter Cash Costs

Source: AME

Operating and upgrade costs will determine smelter viability

Page 20: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Further concentrate delays mean TCs may disappoint, adding additional pressure

Supply from new copper mine projects – 2012 vs. 2013

Source: AME

-3,000

-2,000

-1,000

-

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018

2012 - 2013 Supply Reduction - Base Case2012 - 2013 Supply Reduction - Possible ProjectsAME Base case - production f rom new projects - 2012AME Base case - production f rom new projects - 2013

kt

More marginal projects now less probable

than before

AME’s base case supply forecast for 2015 has been reduced by 2Mt on project delays and cancellations

Page 21: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Taking stock: The supply perspective

Aluminium: The new supply and technology war

Copper: A different type of squeeze

Nickel: Market consolidation and a shift to the East

Zinc: Restrictions or exercising restraint?

Agenda – Is this political economics?

Page 22: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Nickel:Market consolidation and a shift to the East

Page 23: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

The medium term demand outlook for nickel remains favourable

Nickel to Steel Consumption Ratio, 2013

Source: AME

Lower nickel prices will encourage a shift back to 300 series stainless steel

Page 24: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

AME forecasts Chinese Nickel Pig Iron (NPI) production of 430kt in 2013

Estimated NPI operating costs, 2013

Source: AME

Iron Credits make Chinese ferronickel cash costs opaque

Page 25: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

The Indonesian government has backed away from a complete ban of nickel ore exports

• This adds to the 500+kt of capacity added in China over the last 6 years

• More Indonesian project announcements are expected

• Not enough ore and demand to go around in the rest of Asia

• Suphides will continue to shrink as a share

China Nickel Ore Imports, 2009 - 2013

Source: China Customs, AME

0

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

7,000

8,000

Jan

-09

Mar

-09

May

-09

Jul-

09S

ep-0

9N

ov

-09

Jan

-10

Mar

-10

May

-10

Jul-

10S

ep-1

0N

ov

-10

Jan

-11

Mar

-11

May

-11

Jul-

11S

ep-1

1N

ov

-11

Jan

-12

Mar

-12

May

-12

Jul-

12S

ep-1

2N

ov

-12

Jan

-13

Mar

-13

May

-13

Jul-

13

kt

Indonesia Philippines

The weight of production firmly now in Asia

Proposed Ferronickel smelters in Indonesia

Smelter Status Start Year Capacity (kt)

North Konaw e Construction 2014 24Morow ali Regency Probable 2015 5Konaw e Utara FeNi Probable 2015 20SMI Smelter (FeNi) Construction 2015 30South Kalimatan Steel Possible 2016 5Aquila Nickel Project Feasibility 2017 38

East Halmahera FeNi Possible 2019 24Total 146

Page 26: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Taking stock: The supply perspective

Aluminium: The new supply and technology war

Copper: A different type of squeeze

Nickel: Market consolidation and a shift to the East

Zinc: Restrictions or exercising restraint?

Agenda – Is this political economics?

Page 27: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Zinc:Restrictions or exercising restraint?

Page 28: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

After two disappointing years, rising incomes gives zinc demand leverage to steel production

Source: AME

Zinc consumption (kg) per tonne of steel production, 2013

Global zinc consumption % ch. p.a, 2005 - 2013

-15%

-10%

-5%

0%

5%

10%

15%

20%

2005

Q4

2006

Q2

2006

Q4

2007

Q2

2007

Q4

2008

Q2

2008

Q4

2009

Q2

2009

Q4

2010

Q2

2010

Q4

2011

Q2

2011

Q4

2012

Q2

2012

Q4

2013

Q2

% ch. p.a.

Zinc is becoming a demand story

0

2

4

6

8

10

12

14

16

Bra

zil

Ind

ia

Chi

na

S. K

ore

a

Italy

US

A

Ger

man

y

Fra

nce

kg/t steel

Page 29: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Zinc still has the long term demand narrative despite expected demand slowdown

Zinc Intensity of GDP – The Japanese and US experience

Source: AME

Zinc in particular has leverage to growing wealth in the East

-

5,000

10,000

15,000

20,000

25,000

30,000

35,000

40,000

45,000

50,000

- 100 200 300 400 500

GD

P P

er C

apit

a (U

SD

)

Zinc Intensity (Tonnes/$BillionGDP)

US

Japan

Linear (US)

Linear (Japan)

Page 30: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

-

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

3,000

3,500

4,000

4,500

5,000

Jan

-03

Sep

-03

May

-04

Jan

-05

Sep

-05

May

-06

Jan

-07

Sep

-07

May

-08

Jan

-09

Sep

-09

May

-10

Jan

-11

Sep

-11

May

-12

Jan

-13

-

200

400

600

800

1,000

1,200

1,400

1,600

1,800

US$/t kt

LME Stocks (RHS) SHFE Stocks (RHS)

LME Zinc Price (LHS)

Chinese production cuts have put the lead & zinc markets in a sweet spot, temporarily.

Zinc prices and stocks, 2003 – 2013 Refined Zinc Production (kt),

2003 - 2013

AME expects a 100kt zinc deficit and 200kt lead deficit in 2013

Source: AME, Bloomberg

-

100

200

300

400

500

600

700

Jan

-03

Aug

-03

Mar

-04

Oct

-04

May

-05

Dec

-05

Jul-

06

Feb

-07

Sep

-07

Ap

r-08

No

v-08

Jun

-09

Jan

-10

Aug

-10

Mar

-11

Oct

-11

May

-12

Dec

-12

Jul-

13

kt

2012-6.1%

Page 31: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Forward looking information Certain statements and graphics contained in this presentation may contain forward-looking information within the meaning of various securities laws. Such forward-looking information are identified by words such as "estimates", "intends", "expects", "believes", "may", "will" and included, without limitation, statements regarding the company's plan of business operations, production levels and costs, potential contractual arrangements and the delivery of equipment, receipt of working capital, anticipated revenues, mineral reserve and mineral resource estimates, and projected expenditures. There can be no assurance that such statements will prove to be accurate; actual results and future events could differ materially from such statements. Factors that could cause actual results to differ materially include, among others, metal prices, risks inherent in the mining industry, financing risks, labour risks, uncertainty of mineral reserve and resource estimates, equipment and supply risks, regulatory risks and environmental concerns. Most of these factors are outside the control of the company. Investors are cautioned not to put undue reliance on forward-looking information. Except as otherwise required by applicable securities statutes or regulation, the company expressly disclaims any intent or obligation to update publicly forward-looking information, whether as a result of new information, future events or otherwise.

These materials are provided by and remain the copyright of the AME Group. Unless otherwise agreed to in writing with the AME Group, they may not be in whole or part reproduced or published. This material is public, and we encourage you to share it within your organisation, under your own personal awareness of relevant local laws and jurisdiction relating to information dissemination. The AME Group takes no responsibility for this.

Copyright ©AME Group 2013

Contact details and important notices

For further details, please visit our website at www.amegroup.com

AME GroupHong Kong Sydney London New YorkTel: +852 2846 8220 Tel: +612 9262 2264 Tel: +44 207 933 8732 Tel: +44 207 933 [email protected] [email protected] [email protected] [email protected]

Page 32: Great expectations: The upcoming rationalisation of metals supply Shaun Browne, Chairman, AME group

Thank you

• Questions