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With the
Sword of Damocles hanging over the Euro currency by a thread, many
speculators in the foreign exchange markets are flocking to the currency Down
Under – the Australian dollar, attracted to its free wheeling and
dealing, and its heightened volatility. The Aussie dollar offers much higher
interest rates than other Asian currencies, such as the Hong Kong dollar and
Japanese yen, whose exchange rates are essentially fixed by their governments
though daily market intervention, making the Aussie a favorite target for
carry traders.
The Australian dollar is the
fifth-most-actively traded currency in the foreign
exchange markets behind the US-dollar, the Euro, Japan’s yen and the
British pound. The Australian dollar now accounts for 7.5% of the turnover in
the $4-trillion-a-day currency market, and it’s
gaining popularity, because the Australian central bank keeps its
intervention in the currency markets to a minimum. Most of all, its direction
is linked to the commodity super cycle, and offers indirect exposure to the
world’s fastest growing region in Asia, especially China.
Australia’s
mining boom is largely fueled by Chinese demand, which has kept
Australia’s economy out of recession for the past 20-years. “It
is likely to be sustained for a very long period,” Prime Minister Julia
Gillard said on October 3rd. “We are in a different economic
phase and we shouldn’t let the language of boom deceive us. It is a
boom, it is a huge opportunity for growth in our resource sector and great
opportunities for jobs and wealth creation as a result, but it is likely to
be sustained for a very long period of time,” Gillard said.
As is often the case with countries that rely on commodities for a
sizable percentage of their exports, the direction of the Australian dollar
is closely correlated to the gyrations of key commodity prices. Yet interestingly enough, Australia’s top-2
export earners, coal and iron ore aren’t included in the basket of
commodities that are traded in the European or US exchanges. Still, Australia
is blessed with wealth of natural resources that are in high demand,
including crude oil, gold, grains, diamonds, iron ore, uranium, nickel and
coal. Among the Group-of-20
countries, Australia stands out with mining, energy, and agricultural
commodity exports accounting for around 12% of the GDP, but 60% of its total
exports.
Generally
speaking, sharply higher commodity prices can fuel strong inflationary
pressures in most Emerging economies, and prod central banks to lift interest
rates. At the same time, sharply higher commodity prices will zap the
disposable income of consumers and whittle away at the profitability of
producers in the developed nations, such as in Europe, Japan, and the United
States. Yet the Australian economy usually looks healthier when commodity
prices are rising. That positions the
Australian dollar, dubbed the “Aussie,” as a popular alternative
to the Euro, Japanese yen, British pound, and US-dollar for traders looking
to go long on commodity exposure, while going short on currencies whose local
companies are likely to suffer weaker profit margins due to higher input
costs.
High prices for industrial commodities, especially base metals, iron
ore, coal, and natural gas are now providing Australia with its largest trade
surpluses in history. Australia
posted a trade surplus of $3.1-billion in August, - the second highest on
record. That brought the running 12-month total to a healthy
A$22-billion. In particular, the industrialization and urbanization of
billions in China and India is generating huge demand for coal and iron ore,
Australia's two biggest exports. Over two-thirds of Australia’s exports
now go to Asia, with China alone accounting for 26% of total exports, while
the EU takes 7% and the US less than 4-percent.
Overall,
Australia’s miners and farmers are tipped to drive export earnings to
new heights this fiscal year, assuming that commodity prices can defy the
doom and gloom in the global financial markets. Export receipts from mines, gas and oilfields will surge past the
A$215-billion mark for the first time in 2011-12, with farms adding
another A$35-billion to the export tally, despite the high local dollar.
“The +21% increase in resources and energy export earnings reflects
strong increases for most commodities, including coal, iron ore, crude oil
and natural gas, base metals and gold,” the Bureau of Resources and
Energy Economics said.
Chinese
demand for commodities looks to have remained resilient in August, even as
global stock markets nosedived. China’s
imports from Australia rose almost +42% in August from a year earlier to a
record $6.6-billion. China ran a trade deficit with Australia worth
$4.3-billion for the month. That demand helped lift the RBA’s index of commodity prices to
record peaks both July and August, having climbed +25% over the preceding
12-months. Exports to Japan were ahead +7% at nearly $5-billion, while
shipments to Korea climbed +14% to more than $2 billion. For the 12-months to August, exports
to East Asia rose +26%, with shipments to China reaching a cumulative
A$64.8-billion, and up an astonishing +33-percent. Overall, Australian exports to China have increased 25-fold in
real terms since 1990.
The boom
in commodity exports helped to lift the Australian dollar above parity with
the US-dollar on October 15th, 2010 for the first time since
becoming a freely traded currency in 1983. The Aussie then traded above parity
for several days in November. On May 2nd, 2011 the Australian
Dollar hit a record high when it traded at a $1.1011 against the US Dollar.
Seeking to head off inflationary pressures, the Reserve Bank of Australia
(RBA) has kept its overnight cash rate locked at 4.75% for almost a year, a
neutral level that neither stimulates nor retards economic growth, while a
strong Aussie dollar also helps keep inflation in check.
Australia
is also the world’s single-largest exporter of the iron ore. Roughly
62% of Australia’s exports to China are concentrated in sales of iron ore, and 7.5% in coking and thermal coal. Thus, roughly
70% of Australia’s total exports to China, - coal and iron ore, - are
directly linked to China’s vast steelmaking industry, which produces
half of the world’s steel output. To meet China’s voracious demand,
the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Natural Resources is projecting iron ore exports, the biggest earner, to
jump +5% to 425-million tons in 2011, and could reach 600-million tons
by 2016. Some of Australia’s
biggest customers are Baoshan Iron & Steel,
China’s biggest publicly traded steelmaker, Sumitomo Metal Industries,
Japan’s third-largest steelmaker, and India’s Tata Steel.
Rio Tinto is the world’s #2 iron ore producer by volume after
Vale. In the next five years, Rio plans to grow output by +50% to 333-million
tons a year in Australia’s western Pilbara region, at a possible cost
of more than $15-billion. Rio
reported a first-half profit of $7.8-billion and declared it would step up
its share buyback by $2-billion after a cash windfall from record commodity
prices. Melbourne-based rival BHP Billiton produced Australia’s largest-ever annual corporate profit of $21.7-billion
and operating cash flow of $30.1-billion.
Income
from iron ore, BHP’s biggest division, rose a better than expected 122%
to $13.3-billion last year, spurred by strong demand from Chinese steel
producers. The story was the same in other divisions. Earnings from base
metals soared +47% to $6.8-billion. Profits from oil grew +38% to
$6.3-billion. BHP Billiton is also
investing billions in new production capacity in iron ore and coal in
Australia, and completed a $10-billion share buyback ahead of
schedule. Fortescue Metals Group was also rewarded with a
healthy profit courtesy of soaring iron ore prices and increased production,
with a +76% jump in annual profit, to $US1-billion.
In fact, BHP Billiton’s $22-billion profit was equal to nearly a
third of the total $71.4-billion in profits reported by Australia companies
this earnings season. Throw in
Commonwealth Bank’s $6.4-billion profit, and the two companies -- with
a combined 20% index weighting -- produced 40% of the reported profits.
However, despite all of these glowing results, the Australia Stock
Exchange’s metal miners’ index has been sliding down a slippery
slope, since April 11th and has lost as much as -31% of its market
value.
The
selloff in Australian mining shares began to accelerate in July, and in
sympathy, knocked the Aussie dollar from its high perch at $1.100 to below
parity against the US$. Currency traders started to take notice of the most
actively traded Steel rebar contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange, which
began tumbling from as high as 5,400-yuan /ton, to as low as 4,205 yuan /ton this week, after dropping more than -11% in
September, its biggest monthly loss ever. Traders say that a construction
boom in China that fuelled steel prices higher earlier in the year is
starting to lose steam, as a result of tighter credit conditions.
Prices for
iron ore, the key component in making steel, has also tumbled by more than
-12% since August 28th, amid expectations that #1 buyer China
might cut its steel output in the fourth quarter. Index-based spot iron ore
prices, based on Chinese transactions and used by global miners in fixing
supply contracts, slid to $153.45 /ton on October 17th, the lowest
since March. Prices of forward swaps also extended losses, with the Singapore
Exchange-cleared November contract falling more than $4 to $154.17 /ton.
Chinese
steel output fell to 56.7-million tons in September, falling from a record
high of 60.2-million tons in May. Although output in September was still
+16.5% higher than the same period of last year, traders in Shanghai figure
that steel output has reached a peak and expect further declines in the
fourth quarter, normally a peak demand period, with steel mills impacted by a
slowdown in the global economy as well as domestically.
Australia
is also the world’s biggest exporter of coal, shipping about
316-million tons annually, and worth roughly A$46-billion in overseas sales
last year. Australia’s coking coal exports are estimated at 164-million
tons this year, equal to nearly 60% of the global total. China
single-handedly produces about half of the world’s steel, and coking
coal has quickly emerged as one of the handful of commodities in critical
need by its steel sector. In 2009, China became a net importer of coal for
the first time. It bought 104-million metric tons of coal, including both
thermal coal - used to fire power plants for generating electricity, and
coking coal. China’s coal imports for the first nine months of this
year reached 120-million tons.
However,
the price of thermal coal, accounting for about half of Australia’s
coal exports, and in more abundant supply in China, is starting to slide
alongside the stumbling price of iron ore. Fortescue Metals predicts iron ore
prices are likely to continue sliding in the months ahead, even after the
company released solid first-quarter results. Fortescue’s
iron ore fetched an average price of $US160 /ton during the three months to
September, but it now sees “softening steel prices and a tight monetary
policy in China helping to bring iron ore prices down, and would continue to
do so.” In a positive note for Fortescue, its
costs of production were lowered to below $US50 /ton for the first time.
Thermal
coal at Newcastle, Asia’s benchmark price, tumbled to $117.50 /ton this
week. That’s down from a three-year high of $131.50 /ton last January,
when floods inundated Australia’s state of Queensland. Indonesia’s
coal output may rise 6% to a record 340-million tons this year, and supplies
from Australia are expected to increase +12% to 135-million tons in 2012.
Thus, traders now suspect that a small glut of thermal coal in Asia could
start to develop.
Copper, the metal with a PH-D in Economics lost as
much as a third of its value from its record high peak, since August 7th.
On Oct 3rd, JP-Morgan reported that the Global Manufacturing PMI
had contracted worldwide for the first time in over two years last month as
incoming orders for new work dried up. Softening prices for industrial
commodities are starting to take some of the wind out of the sails of the
Australian dollar, and are presenting some formidable headwinds that are
weighing on the Aussie’s exchange rate with the US-dollar.
The Aussie dollar also faces stiff resistance on the
interest rate front, although a rate cut by the RBA wouldn’t be taken
as a big surprise by currency trades. The yield on Australia’s 1-year
T-bill rate has dropped sharply since May 1st, and is last seen at
4.02%, or nearly three-quarters of a percent below the RBA’s overnight
cash rate. Interbank futures on the ASX continue to imply a two-in-three chance of
a 25-basis point rate cut to 4.50% before year’s end. The RBA seemed to
open the door for a small rate cut, as early as next month in what would mark an about-face for the
famously hawkish bank.
The RBA
said in releasing the minutes of its October policy meeting that future
decisions would depend largely on the outlook for domestic prices and on
developments in the shaky global economy. “Members believed that an improved inflation outlook, if
confirmed by further data, would increase the scope for monetary policy to
provide some support to demand, should that prove necessary,” the RBA
said. Much would depend on the inflation data for the third quarter,
due on October 26th, falling back to within the RBA’s 2-3%
inflation target band. The RBA said it expects Australia’s terms of
trade to decline in the period ahead as global prices for commodity exports
eased in response to softening demand in foreign economies.
Even a
modest RBA cut in rates could give a sizable boost to incomes and provide a
direct and rapid stimulus to the economy. There are A$1.2-trillion of home mortgages outstanding, and 95% of them
are based upon variable rates, easily the highest share of any developed
nation. This makes monetary policy a very powerful tool. For an
average mortgage of A$300,000, a 25-basis points
rate cut lowers the interest rate expense by A$600 a year.
Two
quarter point rate cuts by the RBA, expected by Aussie T-bill traders could
help cap the rise of the Australian dollar, and might level the local playing
field for Australian companies competing in the global markets. Western Australia is home to the top
miners, and 10% of the country’s population, yet is earning about 60%
of the foreign income. The other 90% of Australians are earning 40%
the foreign exchange. Manufacturing companies trying to win exports or fend
off imports would get some relief from a slightly weaker Australian dollar.
Gary Dorsch
Editor, Global Money Trends
www.sirchartsalot.com
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