PriceSensitive

 Week 35 Wrap: HotCopper’s top watched; ‘iron ore winter’ has started; Oz inflation @ 3.5% MoM; Harris fracking flip 

ASX News
30 August 2024 13:57 (AEDT)
Storm warning

Adobe Stock

Earlier this month, Chinese steelmaker giant Baowu released commentary that saw iron ore prices drop when it declared a “long and harsh winter” ahead for iron ore miners and related industries. That stormfront has already hit Australian shores. This week, we saw CuFe – a small iron ore miner on the ASX (for whom the elemental symbol for iron forms part of its name) – ditch its iron ore project. 

This feels a lot like the start of the lithium and nickel downturns respectively, where those companies with the least cash were the first to buckle. Fenix Resources could be another one to watch – shareholder returns are down nearly -38% over the last month; the company is another iron ore miner on the small side of things (relative to our majors, anyway.)

BHP pointed towards similar struggles in its earnings report this week. While it revealed internal analysis at the Big Australian suggests the Chinese property market will stage a partial recovery over the next 12 months – good news for iron ore demand fundamentals – there was perhaps a more telling clue. BHP used the word “copper” more than 70 times in its FY24 report – “iron ore” was mentioned less than 15 times.

But perhaps of most concern was a rebuke from China’s official metal market journal China Metallurgical News taking aim at iron ore traders. When prices climbed back above US$100/tn this week, it went as far to describe the gains as “irrational.” 

Looking at the Australian economy outside of exports, we got the latest monthly CPI data this week, and July came in at 3.5% vs 3.8% in June. While the easing was appreciated by the market, the quarterly data series is far more in-depth and most analysts will be waiting to see that instead. 

We got private sector expenditure data this week for Q2 of CY2024; Oxford Economics’ Sean Langcake sees a risk that Australian Q2 GDP growth was negative. Q1 growth was 0.1%; a “technical recession” kicks in at two consecutive negative quarters – but try telling anybody accessing food banks we aren’t currently in a recession. Or anybody else, really. 

Those without mental defences against negative headlines may desire to argue the point, but looking at the last four years of insolvencies, it feels like deliberate ignorance to suggest we’re not in a recession for all intents and purposes. Consumer and business sector sentiment has definitely suggested that for years in a row, now. 

In the US, we got somewhat more meaningful economic commentary from Democratic nominee Kamala Harris this week; in an interview with CNN, she said that strengthening the American middle class would be her main focus. Read: cost of living, the predominant issue on most American voters’ minds. Harris has also vowed not to ban fracking.

Harris continues to gain a lead on Trump in the polls – it looks like the world is tired of Trump’s brand of mockery, which is perhaps because he’s starting to have more and more Biden moments. Look up his speech about sharks and batteries for an example. 

FInally, the three big stories that took HotCopper users’ attention this week were Pilbara Minerals’ FY24 earnings – no surprises, the company’s bottom line took a hit on lower lithium prices – followed by Strike Energy’s declaration of raised mud gas levels downhole Erregulla Deep-1, and, Spartan Resources’ 27m interception grading at nearly 40g/t gold. 

Hotcopper Top Watched this Week

Australian Economy

International Economies 

Australian Equities

International Equities

Commodities

Geopolitics

Related News