LME reliance, domestic aims drive Jakarta Ni index plan

  • : Battery materials, Metals
  • 23/06/09

The Indonesian government's plan to launch a nickel price index may be motivated by intentions to cut dependence on London Metal Exchange (LME) prices, cover wider products in the industrial chain, and accelerate downstream market development, market participants told Argus.

Indonesia — the world's largest nickel producer — will not prioritise a tax or ban on the export of low-grade nickel products such as nickel pig iron (NPI) in the near term, according to senior official in the co-ordinating ministry for maritime and investment affairs Septian Hario Seto.

Indonesia's Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry (ESDM) introduced a nickel ore benchmark price called Harga Patokan Mineral (HPM) in October 2020, after it imposed a ban on ore exports in January 2020. The ESDM uses a formula which is linked to LME nickel prices to set up the benchmark, using parameters such as the ore grade, moisture content, correction factors formulated by the Indonesian government and the Harga Mineral Acuan (HMA) which is the average LME cash official price for the previous two months.

Few nickel smelters in Indonesia used the benchmark when it was just introduced, with their ore purchases done at lower prices than the benchmark, although the Indonesian government wanted to create such a benchmark to calculate taxes more effectively, market participants told Argus. More nickel smelters started to comply with the benchmark when ore demand increased significantly to 1.58mn t of nickel metal equivalent in 2022 from 767,000t in 2020, according to data from International Nickel Study Group (INSG), and stable ore supplies became critical to nickel smelters. Smelters' compliance with the benchmark has increased the government's tax revenues and mines' incomes, and strengthened the government's influence on the resource market.

The new nickel index will most likely include NPI, which is increasingly processed into nickel matte by producers, market participants told Argus.

Indonesia became the global largest nickel producer in 2021. The country produced 1.16mn t of nickel metal equivalent in 2022, including NPI but excluding nickel intermediates mixed hydroxide precipitate (MHP) and nickel matte, up sharply from 878,700t in 2021, according to INSG data. This subsequently resulted in surplus supplies. NPI prices were around 80pc of LME nickel prices in 2018 and only neared LME prices when supplies are tight. The proportion fell to 60pc of LME prices in December 2022 and bounced to 70pc recently. This led the Indonesian government to be of the opinion that NPI is being sold off too cheaply and China's import prices for NPI from Indonesia are not transparent, according to market participants.

Nickel smelters also said feedstock costs are too high if the ore pricing is linked to the LME. The overwhelming majority of NPI production is used in the stainless steel industry, but LME prices can only reflect market conditions for nickel cathode, which is priced higher than NPI and often heavily influenced by the financial market instead of supply and demand factors. This has left nickel smelters facing high feedstock costs and low NPI prices, with hopes that a new price index covering more products in various industrial chains such as stainless steel and electric vehicle (EV) batteries can be launched.

Indonesia exported 2.05mn t of NPI, or 270,000t nickel metal equivalent, to China in the first four months of 2023, up by 46pc from a year earlier, customs data show. Argus forecasts total NPI output in Indonesia will reach 1.36mn t of metal equivalent this year.

Downstream developments

A new price index could also benefit Indonesia's developments in the downstream new energy vehicle (NEV) and battery markets, according to market participants.

The Indonesian government has reiterated its intention to impose restrictions on nickel exports, with a 2pc tax for material containing less than 70pc of nickel from 2022. The aim is to limit Indonesia's primary nickel exports and stimulate investment in products with a higher added value. But the tax has not been implemented until now and the government recently said it would delay the tax and launch a price index.

Two stainless steel producers in Indonesia — with a combined capacity of 7mn t/yr — produced a total of 4.85mn t of crude stainless steel in 2022, ranking second in the world, data compiled by Argus show.

EV sales are forecast to rise to almost a fifth of global total car sales this year, according to data from IEA, with sales in Indonesia more than tripling last year.

Indonesia's Kalimantan region — which houses the North Kalimantan Industrial Estate (KIPI) that is currently under development by a private consortium — is set to receive close to 40pc of the country's new investment tied to the development of supply chains for the battery industry by 2026, according to co-ordinating minister for maritime and investment affairs Luhut Pandjaitan.

Ni ore benchmark price fob with 30pc moisture content ($/wmt)
ContentOct '20May '23change ± %
1.7pc32.2649.8654.56
1.8pc36.0555.7354.59
1.9pc40.0658.7846.73

Global primary nickel output during 2017-23 '000t

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24/05/02

Battery storage stands out in Japan clean power auction

Battery storage stands out in Japan clean power auction

Osaka, 2 May (Argus) — Japan's first auction for long-term zero emissions power capacity has attracted strong bidding interest with a plan to install battery storage, as investment in the power storage system is gaining momentum in line with expanded use of fluctuating renewable energy sources. Japan launched the clean power auction system from the April 2023-March 2024 fiscal year, aiming to spur investment in clean power sources by securing funding for fixed costs in advance to drive the country's decarbonisation by 2050. The first auction, which was held in January, has awarded 1.1GW capacity for battery storage, or 27pc of total contract capacity for clean power sources, excluding gas-fired generation that has been temporally included in the auction system to help ensure stable power supplies, nationwide transmission system operator Organisation for Cross-regional Co-ordination of Transmission Operator (Occto), which manages the auction, said on 26 April. Bidding capacity for battery storage totalled around 4.6GW, the highest volume among any other clean power sources. This means the contract ratio for storage batteries was 24pc compared with the 100pc ratio for ammonia co-firing, hydrogen co-firing , biomass dedicated and nuclear capacity, along with gas-fired capacity . Awarded capacity for battery storage as well as pumping-up electric power facilities reached 1.67GW, exceeding the 1GW sought by the auction. Japan has secured a total of 9.77GW of net zero capacity through the 2023-24 auction. Contract volumes covered 1.3GW of nuclear, 199MW biomass, 577MW of pumping-up electric power, 770MW for ammonia co-firing and 55.3MW hydrogen co-firing, as well as 1.1GW of battery storage. This also included 5.76GW of gas-fired projects. All winners under the auction can generally receive the money for 20 years through Occto, which collect money from the country's power retailers, although they need to refund 90pc of other revenue. The first auction saw total funding of ¥233.6bn/yr ($1.51bn) for decarbonisation power sources and ¥176.6bn/yr for gas-fired capacity. Japan's battery requirements are expected to continue rising, with uncertainty over future nuclear availability likely to spur Tokyo to accelerate the roll-out of renewable energy to meet a 46pc greenhouse gas emissions reduction by 2030-31 against 2013-14 levels — a target still far above the 23pc recorded in 2022-23. Japan will need to install 38-41GW of renewable capacity, nearly triple actual output of 14GW in 2019. Japan is looking to establish lithium-ion battery production capacity of 150GWh/yr domestically and 600GWh/yr globally by 2030. The trade and industry ministry projects the latter target will require 380,000 t/yr of lithium, 310,000 t/yr of nickel, 600,000 t/yr of graphite, 60,000 t/yr of cobalt and 50,000 t/yr of manganese. By Motoko Hasegawa Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Japan's trading firms see metals prices cutting profits


24/05/02
24/05/02

Japan's trading firms see metals prices cutting profits

Tokyo, 2 May (Argus) — Major Japanese trading houses are expecting lower profits from their metals businesses during the April 2024-March 2025 fiscal year, mostly because of lower prices of commodities such as iron ore and coking coal . Japanese trading house Mitsui forecast profits for its metal and natural resource business falling by 14pc on the year to ¥290bn ($1.87bn) during 2024-25, primarily because of lower iron ore prices. Mitsui plans to cut iron ore output by 0.3pc on the year to 60.9mn t at its mining projects where the company owns production ri ghts or a production stake during 2024-25 . This includes the joint venture project Robe River in Australia with Australian iron ore producer Rio Tinto. Japanese trading house Sojitz also expects profits from its metal and natural resource business to decline to ¥35bn, down by 20pc on the year, mostly because of a bearish coking coal market. The company said its overall coal business can cut production costs during 2024-25, partly because it plans larger-scale output at the Gregory Crinum coking coal mine in Australia, without disclosing further details. But Sojitz said it cannot generate higher profits because of lower coking coal prices. The trading house expects the average coking coal price to fall to $230/t during 2024-25, according to the company's chief financial officer Makoto Shibuya, down by $57/t from a year earlier. The company reiterated that the price is not necessarily their selling price. Sumitomo expects profits from its natural resource business would remain flat at ¥72bn on the year, mostly as its nickel production in Madagascar recovers from the output cuts in 2023 , with an aim to produce 19,000t of nickel during 2024-25, up by 9.8pc on the year. A rebound in nickel production could offset possible losses from coal and coking coal prices falling to $266/t and $133/t respectively in the ordinary market, down by $21 and $9, according to the trading house. Sumitomo plans to increase coking coal production by 9.1pc to 1.2mn t but reduce coal output by 4.8pc to 4mn t during 2024-25. By Yusuke Maekawa Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Evion-Metachem Indian project starts producing graphite


24/05/02
24/05/02

Evion-Metachem Indian project starts producing graphite

Singapore, 2 May (Argus) — Australian graphite producer Evion's joint venture with Indian producer Metachem Manufacturing has produced and sold 700kg of expandable graphite, with more output planned in the coming months, after missing its timeline last year. Capacity of the expandable graphite plant, located at Kurkumbh near the west Indian city of Pune, will increase to at least 1,800 t/yr over the coming months, said Evion in its latest quarterly activity report. The agreement between the two firms originally envisioned 2,000-2,500 t/yr of production capacity in the first three years, with plans to begin an expansion to double the capacity starting from the second year. Evion previously was expecting first production in October-December 2023. Evion, formerly known as BlackEarth Minerals, back in 2021 signed an offtake deal with Austrian downstream graphite firm Grafitbergbau Kaiserberg for up to 2,500 t/yr of expandable graphite. Graphite concentrate for the plant is expected to come from external parties in the first two years of operations, subsequently switching to products from its Maniry graphite project in Madagascar, said Evion. Madagascar's national office for the environment is carrying out the environmental and social impact assessment for the Maniry project, according to Evion. India in July 2023 identified 30 critical minerals necessary to its green energy transition and energy self-reliance, including graphite. The country's mines ministry, through state trading firm MSTC, in March launched the second round of its auction , involving 18 blocks, for development of critical and strategic minerals in the country. By Joseph Ho Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US southbound barge demand falls off earlier than usual


24/05/01
24/05/01

US southbound barge demand falls off earlier than usual

Houston, 1 May (Argus) — Southbound barge rates in the US have fallen on unseasonably low demand because of increased competition in the international grain market. Rates for voyages down river have deteriorated to "unsustainable" levels, said American Commercial Barge Line. Southbound rates declined in April to an average tariff of 284pc across all rivers this April, according to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA), which is below breakeven levels for many barge carriers. Rates typically do not fall below a 300pc tariff until May or June. Southbound freight values for May are expected to hold steady or move lower, said sources this week. Southbound activity has increased recently because of the low rates, but not enough to push prices up. The US has already sold 84pc of its forecast corn exports and 89pc of forecast soybean exports with only five months left until the end of the corn and soybean marketing year, according to the USDA. US corn and soybean prices have come down since the beginning of the year in order to stay competitive with other origins. The USDA lowered its forecast for US soybean exports by 545,000t in its April report as soybeans from Brazil and Argentina were more competitively priced. US farmers are holding onto more of their harvest from last year because of low crop prices, curbing exports. Prompt CBOT corn futures averaged $435/bushel in April, down 34pc from April 2023. Weak southbound demand could last until fall when the US enters harvest season and exports ramp up southbound barge demand. Major agriculture-producing countries such as Argentina and Brazil are expected to export their grain harvest before the US. Brazil has finished planting corn on time . unlike last year. The US may face less competition from Brazil in the fall as a result. Carriers are tying up barges earlier than usual to avoid losses on southbound barge voyages. Carriers that have already parked their barges will take their time re-entering the market unless tariffs become profitable again. The carriers who remain on the river will gain more southbound market share and possibly more northbound spot interest. By Meghan Yoyotte and Eduardo Gonzalez Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US Fed signals rates likely to stay high for longer


24/05/01
24/05/01

US Fed signals rates likely to stay high for longer

Houston, 1 May (Argus) — Federal Reserve policymakers signaled they are likely to hold rates higher for longer until they are confident inflation is slowing "sustainably" towards the 2pc target. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) held the federal funds target rate unchanged at a 23-year high of 5.25-5.5pc, for the sixth consecutive meeting. This followed 11 rate increases from March 2022 through July 2023 that amounted to the most aggressive hiking campaign in four decades. "We don't think it would be appropriate to dial back our restrictive policy stance until we've gained greater confidence that inflation is moving down sustainably," Fed chair Jerome Powell told a press conference after the meeting. "It appears it'll take longer to reach the point of confidence that rate cuts will be in scope." In a statement the FOMC cited a lack of further progress towards the committee's 2pc inflation objective in recent months as part of the decision to hold the rate steady. Despite this, the FOMC said the risks to achieving its employment and inflation goals "have moved toward better balance over the past year," shifting prior language that said the goals "are moving into better balance." The decision to keep rates steady was widely expected. CME's FedWatch tool, which tracks fed funds futures trading, had assigned a 99pc probability to the Fed holding rates steady today while giving 58pc odds of rate declines beginning at the 7 November meeting. In March, Fed policymakers had signaled they believed three quarter points cuts were likely this year. Inflation has ticked up lately after falling from four-decade highs in mid-2022. The consumer price index inched back up to an annual 3.5pc in March after reaching a recent low of 3pc in June 2023. The employment cost index edged up in the first quarter to the highest in a year. At the same time, job growth, wages and demand have remained resilient. The Fed also said it would begin slowing the pace of reducing its balance sheet of Treasuries and other notes in June, partly to avoid stress in money markets. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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