(Adds Hebei Iron proposal to set up centralized iron ore import and pricing company; combines elements from other stories.)
BEIJING -(Dow Jones)- Hebei Iron and Steel Group, one of China's most influential steelmakers, has pitched a raft of proposals to the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, focused on moving the country toward a unified iron ore import price and gaining better control of the raw material's prices.
The company--which recently surpassed Baosteel Group Corp. as China's largest steel miller by output, according to analysts--suggested to the ministry that global miners be prevented from getting involved in a proposed iron ore distribution center at Qingdao, a senior company executive said Friday at a closed-door industry meeting.
Such a move would limit the possibility of miners promoting a spot market for iron ore, said the executive, who didn't want to be named.
Brazilian miner Vale S.A. (VALE) is building a regional distribution center for 400,000-metric ton ships at Qingdao.
The Hebei executive said it would hurt the interests of China and its steelmakers if iron ore miners are allowed to establish a distribution center that would probably become a "base for the spot market" at Qingdao Harbor.
China is trying to unify import prices for iron ore and to increase its leverage against the major global producers--Vale, Rio Tinto PLC (RIO.AU) and BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP, so Hebei has suggested that an iron ore company be formed to centralize imports and price negotiations.
The proposal was for the company, tentatively called National Ore Resource United Co., to be formed using initial investments by the country's 16 largest steel mills.
The company would be responsible for "centralizing iron ore imports and investments," and the imported iron ore could be distributed to investors according to their investment amounts, the executive said. "This could also be a better way of negotiating with iron ore miners than having every steel mill handle their own long-term negotiations."
Chinese steelmakers face the prospect of sharply higher benchmark prices for iron ore this year.
The 2010-2011 benchmark is likely to rise more than 40% over last year's price, putting a great burden on steelmakers, the executive said. Most contracts cover periods starting on April 1.
"If the price rises 40%, it will exceed the 2008-2009 benchmark price (the historic peak for China's bulk discount rate) by 3%; if this year's price rises 50%, it will exceed the 2008-2009 price by 13%," the official said. "We have a huge burden."
Negotiations for the 2010-2011 iron ore benchmark price continue with no clear deadline.
"The spot price of iron ore is over CNY1,000 (a metric ton) now," he said. "Our company is undergoing full-scale losses on all products based on the spot prices between Feb. 18 and Feb. 24."
The executive also said that Hebei Iron is in talks for a stake in a Brazilian miner on a deal that could potentially be valued at $6 billion, though he didn't indicate whether this amount was what Hebei intends to spend.
"Whether it's a majority or minority holding is not yet decided," he said. "The talks are still in progress."
A media official at the ministry had no immediate comment Monday. Hebei couldn't be reached.
-Yajun Zhang and Chuin-Wei Yap contributed to this article; Dow Jones Newswires; (86 10) 8400-7712; yajun.zhang@dowjones.com
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(END) Dow Jones Newswires
March 01, 2010 02:51 ET (07:51 GMT)
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