The dry bulk market is calm, with freight futures volatility low and iron ore prices dipping below $100/mt, amid weak Chinese steel demand and high inventories, reports Breakwave Advisors.
Summer Slowdown Takes a Toll on Volatility
It has been particularly calm in the dry bulk market, with freight futures volatility hitting multi-year lows and physical activity absent of the jumps and falls the shipping market is accustomed to. Although it seems freight prices are slowly drifting lower, in general, dry bulk spot rates have stabilized at particularly strong levels compared to history for this time of the year. Looking forward though, fundamentals are becoming less supportive: China’s steel industry remains weak, iron ore inventories are still high, and coal demand for power generation in the country is getting less competitive versus a very strong year for hydroelectric generation. On the other hand, September has historically been a relatively robust month for Capesizes, something that is also evident by the contango in the futures market, but once again, it is difficult to see the urgency by traders of securing iron ore cargoes when the state of the core steel industry is going through one of the roughest periods in recent memory. We remain constructive for an uptick in rates in the near term, but are very well aware of the bearish fundamentals, that absent the generally supportive low orderbook would be in much worse shape, but the tight fleet supply could very well be the key to a turnaround if demand improves, something that is mainly subject to strong fiscal stimulus from China.
Iron Ore Back Below $100/mt
As we have been regularly discussing, the iron ore market is oversupplied and although prices have tried to remain supportive on the back of a global euphoria around risk assets, the bearish fundamentals have now become difficult to ignore. Iron ore prices have now decisively fallen into the double-digit territory but remain above the breakeven levels of most major miners. Consequently, more is needed for the market to balance, but more importantly, more time is required to work off the excess inventories in China that has accumulated over the last year or so. Whether Chinese steel production is now past its peak or not is up for debate, but we struggle to come up with a positive outlook for steel demand in the near term. As a result, we continue to see weakness in iron ore prices, although now such a forecast has become the base case in the investment community, and thus, further declines might not be as smooth as they have been in the past. Finally, with lower prices come also tighter freight margins as miners fight hard for every single cent, and thus we anticipate some lower volatility for freight rates although winter weather will definitely be the primary driver of price development once again.
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Source: Breakwave