Indonesia Weighs Ore Ban as Citigroup Raises Nickel Forecast

  • Wednesday, November 20, 2013
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  • Keywords:Indonesia Ore Ban Nickel
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Indonesia will press on with a plan to ban raw-mineral exports next year, while signaling that the curbs may be amended in practice, according to two officials who addressed a conference in the largest mined nickel producer.
 
“If we look at the existing law, yes by 2014 we are sure to implement this, but we also consider the effect and discuss it with parliament, how to deal with this,” said Bambang Adi, deputy to the coordinating minister for economic affairs. Dede Suhendra, director of mining at the Energy and Mineral Resources Ministry, told the gathering: “We have to appreciate companies that are serious about building smelters.”
 
Indonesia is seeking to boost the value of commodity sales, and while a blanket ban is mandated by the 2009 Mining Law, the government may exempt companies that are operating or planning to build processing plants. Nickel is this year’s worst base-metal performer on the London Metal Exchange amid record stockpiles. Citigroup raised its nickel forecast yesterday, saying the proposed curbs are being mispriced by the market.
 
“We don’t talk about export ban, but implementing a law created by government and parliament,” Bambang, who helps to oversee mining policy, told the conference in Jakarta. “Now, we are in process of how to create regulation below the law. This is still in the process.”
 
The government has received 89 proposals for nickel-processing plants with potential capacity of about 50 million metric tons, Suhendra said. The plants will be located in Kalimantan, Sulawesi, Papua and Maluku, he told delegates.
 
Bear market
 
Three-month futures for the metal used to make stainless steel have slumped 20 percent to $13,600 a ton on the LME this year, entering a bear market in May. Citigroup boosted its 2014 forecast to $17,000 a ton from $16,375, “driven by our core view that the Indonesian export ban is essentially being mispriced by the LME market,” according to the report.
 
The trade policies inIndonesia are a focal point for the industry, Bank of America Merrill Lynch said in a report on Oct. 14. Of three possible scenarios, the more likely were the ban being implemented over the short term before new rules were introduced and the start of illegal shipments, it said.
 
The impact from the planned ban on shipments won’t be as big as people expect, Deputy Trade Minister Bayu Krisnamurthi told reporters in Jakarta on Nov. 7. The ban will raise prices, which will offset lower export volumes, Krisnamurthi said.
 
Export estimate
 
Nickel-ore exports may gain to an estimated 52 million tons this year from 41 million tons in 2012, Suhendra told reporters today. Shipments may rise in 2013 after the government removed quotas earlier this year, and as miners boost sales before the ban, Suhendra said, without giving an estimate for 2014 volumes.
 
About 30 percent of nickel mines in Indonesia are losing money at current prices, according to Chris Hoet, Vale SA’s vice president marketing in Asia for base metals, who said that the country accounted for 28 percent of global supply last year. Vale Indonesia both produces nickel-in-matte at its smelter in Sulawesi, and ships ore overseas.
 
“We’re glad to hear today that Indonesia is serious about adding value and processing the nickel here,” Hoet told the conference. If the curb is implemented, prices in London may increase and investment in Indonesia may rise, Hoet said.
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