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Thursday, March 10, 2011

Port Hedland iron ore shipments tumble in seasonal drop


Thu Mar 10, 2011 4:22am GMT

* Chinese New Year probably biggest factor in drop

* Cyclone, shorter month also weighed

SYDNEY, March 10 (Reuters) - Iron ore shipments from Australia's Port Hedland, one of the world's largest export terminals, fell 16 percent in February, but the drop was mostly due to seasonal and weather-related factors, and analysts expect a rebound in March.

Iron ore shipments dropped to 12.85 million tonnes in February from 15.33 million in January and 17.33 million in December, the port said on Thursday, but analysts suggested the chief culprit was a holiday in China, the biggest destination of the port's shipments.

"It's all seasonal with the Chinese New Year when you've got a week or so with not too many (customers) to trade with," said Tom Price, a commodity analyst with UBS.

"A better signal is the spot price, which was quite strong, indicating solid demand."

Officials at Port Hedland, which is used by BHP Billiton and Fortescue Metals and shipped more than 180 million tonnes of iron ore in 2010, pointed out that the port was closed for several days in February due to tropical cyclone Carlos and that the unadjusted figures also do not reflect the shorter month.

Iron ore shipments a year earlier dropped around 2 million tonnes in February, but made up nearly all of the loss in the following month.

February exports from Port Hedland to China fell to 9.03 million tonnes from 9.97 million in January while exports to Japan nearly halved to 1.47 million from 2.82 million.

China's iron ore imports in February reached 48.64 million tonnes, down 29.5 percent from a January record, with trade disrupted by the Lunar New Year, China's customs agency said in a statement on Thursday.(Reporting by Balazs Koranyi Editing : Himani Sarkar, sourced Reuters)

Tags : China's iron ore imports in February, steelmaking

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