Impor COAL china naik drastis...

Is China Leading a Global Rebound?


Friday May 1, 5:30 pm ET


By Elizabeth Collins, CFA





Given the news of China's surging raw materials imports in the first
quarter, it would be easy to jump to the conclusion that the country is
quickly on its way to recovering its former economic vigor. Copper and
iron ore imports are breaking records, coal companies expect China to
become a net importer for the first time in 2009, and the country's
demand for imported virgin fiber has surged in recent months. However,
after looking at the data more closely, a few themes emerge that point
to alternative explanations for China's apparently healthy appetite for
raw materials. Further, while we see signs that China's stimulus plan
is taking hold, other trends in raw materials corroborate the fact that
China's export activity is still relatively weak.





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China appears to be stockpiling some key materials for strategic purposes.




China is the world's largest consumer of copper, accounting for 27%
of world demand in 2008, and it's also the largest importer. China's
imports of copper rose 33% in the first quarter of 2009 over the
year-ago period, according to the country's customs agency. This surge
in China's imports is likely partly responsible for copper's rise from
below $1.30 per pound in late 2008 to around $2.00 today. Rumors abound
that China's State Reserve Bureau (SRB) is building strategic
inventories of copper, although this is hard to independently verify
because SRB inventory levels are not public information. However,
strategic purchases of copper at this point make sense for two possible
reasons. First, copper is an actively traded hard asset that can be
used as a store of value by those worried about a potential decline in
the U.S. dollar. Second, China may simply be taking advantage of an
opportunity to "buy low" for a commodity that's an important component
of economic activity (copper traded hands for $4.00 in July 2008).





China's stimulus plan seems to be driving demand for infrastructure-related 
materials.




Although demand for coal from the power sector declined in the
first quarter of 2009, according to the China Electricity Council, Chinese coal 
production grew in the first quarter and imports have been strong in recent 
months.
This apparent disconnect can be explained by the relative mix of demand
for coal. While in the United States the lion's share of coal goes into
electricity generation; in China the industrial sector claims a
significant but still-small share of coal output. It's possible that
demand from coal-intensive infrastructure-related industries--such as
cement--is supporting overall demand for coal. China is the world's
largest producer of both coal and cement.





Low international commodities prices make some imports more attractive.




We've mentioned that China's coal imports have been strong
recently. Another likely contributing factor is the lower price of
imported coal relative to domestic coal. While China's domestic coal
producers have been negotiating with power companies for an increase in
contract prices (despite weaker demand from the power sector), China's
power companies have been looking to lower-cost imports to manage
costs.




China's imports of iron ore (a key ingredient for steelmaking) also
spiked dramatically in February and March, and stockpiles of iron ore
appear to be building at Chinese ports, according to data from the
China Mining Association and Mysteel.com. The larger iron ore producers
have been selling their iron ore to Chinese customers at a discount.
While China is endowed with a large amount of iron ore reserves, its
ores are lower grade than those in Brazil and Australia, for example.
Based on comments from the China Iron & Steel Association, it's
possible that small Chinese steel mills are taking advantage of the
opportunity to buy higher-grade imported ore at attractive prices.
Previously, imported ore was only available to large mills.




We can see a similar trend in the recent surge in China's imports
of virgin fiber (plant material used to make paper). Much of China's
domestic virgin fiber supply is derived from straw and other so-called
"vegetable" materials, a feedstock making the fiber ill-suited to
high-quality papers used in glossy magazines and office papers. By
contrast, imported virgin fibers from Canada, Russia, Indonesia, and
Brazil from trees have excellent physical characteristics for printing
and writing papers. Foreign virgin fiber prices have fallen enough that
imports can now compete on price in addition to quality, so mills
switching to imports is a no-brainer.





The mix of fiber imports corroborates weak manufacturing exports.




We've mentioned the recent surge in China's imports of virgin
fiber, which stands in contrast to still-weak imports of recycled
fiber, despite a collapse in prices for both materials. Recycled fiber
imports are primarily used for the manufacture of corrugated boxes, a
significant portion of which are filled with goods bound for overseas
markets. By contrast, the bulk of Chinese virgin fiber imports find
their way into printing and writing papers, for the most part destined
for domestic markets. Consequently, all else equal, recycled fiber
imports tend to expand or contract along with Chinese manufacturing
exports, whereas virgin fiber imports correlate more with domestic
printing and writing paper consumption. Therefore, the relative
strength of virgin fiber imports would seem to indicate a relatively
strong domestic economy and relatively weak export activity.





Conclusions

Do macroeconomic figures support the themes we're seeing in raw
materials imports? In many cases, they do. Fixed asset investments were
strong in the first quarter, driven by investments in transportation,
according to the National Bureau of Statistics in China. It appears
that the Chinese government's stimulus program has begun in earnest.
This helps explain the strength in coal demand that we're seeing.
Meanwhile, China's exports were weak during the first quarter, which
sheds light on the relative strength of virgin fiber imports compared
with recycled fiber imports.




On the other hand, the surge in imports of copper and iron ore do
not lead us to conclude that China is set for a swift and full recovery
in economic activity. Rather, we think the strength in these imports
can be at least partly explained by strategic moves by the Chinese
government or rational decisions by domestic steel mills.


To: [email protected]
From: [email protected]
Date: Tue, 26 May 2009 11:59:44 +0800
Subject: Re: [ob] BUMI - BD Detector

oil sekarang level 61-62 dolar
$63 break out new level..

Dario Amran

--- Pada Sel, 26/5/09, pavinee tangmanomana <[email protected]> menulis:


Dari: pavinee tangmanomana <[email protected]>
Topik: Re: [ob] BUMI - BD Detector
Kepada: [email protected]
Tanggal: Selasa, 26 Mei, 2009, 10:34 AM







The Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries meets on Wednesday and 
Thursday in Vienna to discuss a possible production cut that would add to 4.2 
million barrels a day of output reductions the cartel has announced since 
September.
OPEC leaders this year have said they want the price of crude at $70 a barrel, 
and most analysts say the recent jump to above $60 from below $35 in March will 
keep the group from any further production cuts.
"We don't expect any changes in output targets," Shum said. "The price is too 
high to cut."
Oil prices gained some support from developments in Nigeria, where militants 
said Monday they had destroyed major pipelines operated by Chevron Corp. in the 
country's oil-rich southern delta region.
The Movement for the Emancipation of the Niger Delta also said it freed three 
Filipino oil workers taken hostage earlier this month.
The militants say they are fighting to force the federal government to send 
more of the oil-industry funds it controls to the Niger Delta, which remains 
deeply impoverished despite five decades of oil production.
 
This news will inflence the price of crude oil up or down??

--- On Mon, 5/25/09, d_r_m$$ <[email protected]> wrote:


From: d_r_m$$ <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [ob] BUMI - BD Detector
To: [email protected]
Date: Monday, May 25, 2009, 9:20 PM






Prof JT, 
berart buy nich ?

--- On Mon, 5/25/09, M|C <[email protected]> wrote:


From: M|C <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [ob] BUMI - BD Detector
To: [email protected]
Date: Monday, May 25, 2009, 10:13 PM




Jadi simpulannya Buy atau nunggu break 2300 dulu pak JT ?


Pada tanggal 25/05/09, JsxTrader <jsxtra...@yahoo. com> menulis: 








Bandar Detector v3.5
Review of Bumi Resources Tbk (id;BUMI)
as of 25/05/2009

Bandar terlihat masih mengumpulkan barang-barangnya.


Commentary ini bukanlah suatu rekomendasi beli atau jual, melainkan suatu 
petunjuk untuk menginterpretasikan indikator tertentu. Informasi di atas 
seharusnya digunakan hanya oleh investor yang memahami resiko dalam trading 
saham. Kami tidak bertanggung jawab atas kerugian apa pun yang disebabkan oleh 
penggunaan expert ini mau pun isinya.

Bandar Detector v3.0
©2008 PT Bumianyar Futuria.










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