Selalu ada optimisme masa depan....
Well......Sebagai Miner, saya selalu optimis Batubara will always comeback :) 
Sedang mikir di berapa bagusnya masuk BUMI,BRAU,INDY (Longterm Focus Only)?


Coal's comeback  

Wednesday, 31 October 2012
A COMBINATION of factors seem poised to rebound coal prices next year, 
according to analyses presented this week at the Investing in Asian Mining 
Indaba in Singapore.
Forces including increased Chinese power demand, unusually wet weather in India 
and strike action in Australia were noted as influencing agents on suffering 
coal prices in recent quarters and an almost inevitable recovery in 2013.

Core Consultants managing director Lara Smith said that the various
  operational curtailments from global coal heavyweights this year were too
  severe a reaction to a market primed to recover lost ground.

Smith credited weak coal markets in Q3 2012 to Asia’s wettest rain season in
  seven years, and booming Indian and Chinese hydroelectric power at the
  expense of thermal plants.

“Now that the seasons have changed, we should see a turnaround and an
  increased use of coal-burning at the expense of hydro power,” she said.

“So we should see an additional 8 million tonnes of coal utilization in 2012
  compared to 2011 as the power stations start to restock as soon as the
  monsoon period ends.”

Core Consultants anticipates thermal prices will reach $US105 per tonne by
  the end of Q4 2012.

Metallurgical coal markets were also predicted to improve, due to reduction
  in Chinese inventory, continued Japanese reconstruction efforts after the
  Fukushima disaster, and the fact that prices are below Australian producers’
  costs. 

Smith tipped met coal prices to touch $200 per tonne in Q1 next year and
  attain an average $228t for the whole of 2013, compared to 2012’s average of
  $223t. 

This estimate was paralleled with an expectation that Anglo American, BHP
  Billiton and Rio Tinto would deliver 5.3Mt in 2014 from Australian operations
  in addition to a further 360,000t from Rio’s emerging Benga mine in
  Mozambique. 

The Steel Index director Tim Hard also confirmed projections that Chinese
  iron ore and steel demand would increase in the short-term as both met and
  thermal coal sentiment at the Indaba took on a bullish tone.

The three-day conference at Singapore’s Marina Bay Sands convention centre
  represents an Asia-focused expansion of the successful Investing in African
  Mining Indaba held annually in South Africa. 
Coal's comeback  

Wednesday, 31 October 2012
A COMBINATION of factors seem poised to rebound coal prices next year, 
according to analyses presented this week at the Investing in Asian Mining 
Indaba in Singapore.
Forces including increased Chinese power demand, unusually wet weather in India 
and strike action in Australia were noted as influencing agents on suffering 
coal prices in recent quarters and an almost inevitable recovery in 2013.

Core Consultants managing director Lara Smith said that the various operational 
curtailments from global coal heavyweights this year were too severe a reaction 
to a market primed to recover lost ground.

Smith credited weak coal markets in Q3 2012 to Asia’s wettest rain season in 
seven years, and booming Indian and Chinese hydroelectric power at the expense 
of thermal plants.

“Now that the seasons have changed, we should see a turnaround and an increased 
use of coal-burning at the expense of hydro power,” she said.

“So we should see an additional 8 million tonnes of coal utilization in 2012 
compared to 2011 as the power stations start to restock as soon as the monsoon 
period ends.”

Core Consultants anticipates thermal prices will reach $US105 per tonne by the 
end of Q4 2012.

Metallurgical coal markets were also predicted to improve, due to reduction in 
Chinese inventory, continued Japanese reconstruction efforts after the 
Fukushima disaster, and the fact that prices are below Australian producers’ 
costs. 

Smith tipped met coal prices to touch $200 per tonne in Q1 next year and attain 
an average $228t for the whole of 2013, compared to 2012’s average of $223t. 

This estimate was paralleled with an expectation that Anglo American, BHP 
Billiton and Rio Tinto would deliver 5.3Mt in 2014 from Australian operations 
in addition to a further 360,000t from Rio’s emerging Benga mine in Mozambique. 

The Steel Index director Tim Hard also confirmed projections that Chinese iron 
ore and steel demand would increase in the short-term as both met and thermal 
coal sentiment at the Indaba took on a bullish tone.

The three-day conference at Singapore’s Marina Bay Sands convention centre 
represents an Asia-focused expansion of the successful Investing in African 
Mining Indaba held annually in South Africa.  

Kirim email ke