Australia:
Government revenue at risk as commodity prices plummet
THE
nation’s commodity wealth is coming under growing pressure as the
outlook for iron ore and oil-linked LNG prices worsens, threatening
shareholder returns, state and federal government revenues and
prospects for new investment.
1
December, 2014
Iron
ore prices continue to slide, with Fortescue Metals on Friday forced
to pull back on spending plans and a prominent Chinese fund manager
forecasting a decade of low prices.
And
oil prices slumped over the weekend after OPEC nations led by Saudi
Arabia made a landmark decision to keep oil flowing and drive prices
down to hurt the new wave of US onshore shale producers.
Shanghai
Jianfeng vice-president Liang Ruian told The Australian that
iron ore prices of $US50 per tonne were not out of the question and
that prices could slide below $US60 next year, while on the oil
front, AMP chief economist Shane Oliver warned that prices, which
fell below $US70 a barrel over the weekend, could plummet to as low
as $US40.
The
sliding iron ore price will slash the government intake from the
biggest corporate taxpayers of recent years, BHP Billiton and Rio
Tinto, which both made the lion’s share of Australian profits from
their West Australian iron ore mines.
In
WA, a budgeted $US123 iron ore price forecast has state royalty
expectations for this year in tatters, with prices now trading around
$US70 a tonne, down nearly 50 per cent, as BHP, Rio and Fortescue
have flooded the market with expanded supply approved during the
boom.
While
sliding oil prices would have been an unambiguous positive for the
nation 10 years ago, it is now less clear cut.
The
continued weakness was noted in an aftermarket release from Fortescue
on Friday that said the Perth miner would defer $US650 million
($763.5m) of spending this year and that “it is prudent to defer
investing additional capital that increases supply into the market”.
Rio
and BHP are still making substantial money at current prices,
with Rio last week saying it would make a 55 per cent earnings
margin, the biggest of the four majors, at iron ore prices of $US76 a
tonne.
But
BHP, whose two biggest cash centres are iron ore and oil and gas, has
tempered its language on shareholder returns as its future cashflows
look less bountiful and just maintaining its progressive dividend
starts to look challenging.
Rio
last week shut down talk of a big one-off capital return, saying it
would focus on sustainable returns but stressed that these would be
material.
Rio
iron ore chief Andrew Harding told The Australian there had been
little change in the supply and demand expectation scenario for iron
ore, but that it was impossible to predict what prices would do.
Mr
Harding said he thought it would be the higher-cost miners that
needed to shut down production in China and other non-traditional
iron ore producers as BHP brought low-cost expansions on, rather than
majors such as Vale or Fortescue.
The
costs of the four majors are in the lowest 60 per cent of the
industry, with Rio the lowest, followed by BHP, then Vale and
Fortescue.
Yesterday,
BHP iron ore boss Jimmy Wilson told the Nine Network that prices
could fall further.
“If
more low-cost supply continues to come on, prices will continue to go
down,” he said, adding that $US50 a tonne sounded “a little low”.
About
$180 billion of ongoing LNG investment in the country means
oil-linked LNG is forecast to become Australia’s second-biggest
export earner after iron ore, and export revenues and corporate taxes
will be increasingly linked to oil prices.
The
US crude benchmark, West Texas Intermediate, fell 10 per cent to
$US66.15 a barrel on Friday night in response to the OPEC news, after
resuming trade after Thanksgiving.
European
benchmark Brent oil prices, which had lost 7 per cent on Thursday,
lost another 3 per cent on Friday, settling at $US70.15 a barrel.
UBS
analyst Nic Burns said Santos had a break-even oil price of $US72 a
barrel, meaning an equity raising or asset sales could be needed if
low prices continued. He said Woodside was unlikely to be able to
push ahead with the Browse floating LNG project in WA if prices
remained low.
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