Iron Ore Looks Like a One-Way Bet: Down

 | Nov 10, 2014 02:35AM ET

Iron ore hit a 5-year low last week, lack of demand for physical cargo saw the spot price drop to $76 per metric ton, the lowest level since June 2009 according to the The closure of steel mills near Beijing ahead of the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation conference this week has been blamed by many commentators as the reason for the lack of demand, but the slide has been relentless this year and the shutdowns in Hebei are only hastening the normal winter slow down. The tactics of the big 3 iron ore producers is well documented. The strategy appears to be achieve the greatest economy of scale by going for volume and mechanization.

As prices fall, competitors will go out of business and the field will be left to Rio Tinto (NYSE:RIO), Bhp Billiton (NYSE:BBL) and VALE (NYSE:VALE). Rio is accepted as the lowest cost producer but BHP intends to increase production at mines in Western Australia by 65m tons to 290m tons a year by 2017 in an effort to reduce costs so it can overtake Rio as the cheapest iron ore supplier, meanwhile Vale is looking to lift output to 453 million tons by 2018 from 306 million tons in 2013, according to the FT.