Chinese traders ditch cheap U.S. coal for domestic
supply as tariffs loom
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[August 22, 2018]
By Meng Meng and Josephine Mason
BEIJING (Reuters) - Some Chinese coal
traders handling U.S. imports have begun sourcing future supplies
domestically, people with knowledge of the matter said, as they await
delivery of the last U.S. cargoes to arrive before hefty tariffs kick in
on Thursday in a deepening trade row between the world's top two
economies.
At least six cargoes of U.S. coal were due to arrive this month, Thomson
Reuters Eikon shipping data showed, but at least three were still en
route or waiting off ports to unload cargo on Wednesday.
From Thursday, the United States will impose new tariffs on $16 billion
of goods and in retaliation, Beijing has pledged additional tariffs on a
similar amount of U.S. imports including metals, fuel - and coal.
Shanghai Runhei International, a major domestic coal trading house,
cleared its last U.S. metallurgical coal cargo at Qinhuangdao port
earlier this week, a senior manager with the trading house said. He
declined to be named because he was not authorized to speak to the
media.
"We have completely stopped U.S. metallurgical coal (imports), which is
popular among steel mills, in late July. There is too much uncertainty
in trade," he said.
The cargos due for August arrival were mainly booked in May after
Beijing first threatened to hit coal with heavy tariffs and Chinese
buyers were able to scoop up volumes at bargain prices, according to the
manager.
Shanghai Runhei said it will increase purchases of domestic coking coal
instead of foreign supplies to meet demand from clients - a policy that
is set to gain traction.
"Unless U.S. coal producers give us a big bargain, Chinese buyers will
not import U.S. coal," said Huang Zhiqi, a coal trading consultant at
Falcon Information.
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Imported coal is seen lifted by cranes from a coal cargo ship at a
port in Lianyungang, Jiangsu province, China July 26, 2018.
REUTERS/Stringer
EASY TO SHIFT
China's appetite for U.S. coal grew this year as traders looked for alternative
supplies after Australian coal prices hit six-year highs in July.
"Traders have anticipated yuan depreciation and shored up imports in advance,
including cargoes from the United States," Wang Fei, coal analyst at Huaan
Futures said. "Traders can easily shift their supplies to either domestic coal
or Australian and Indonesian coal since U.S. imports only count for a tiny
share."
Some Chinese buyers were also hoping to use the trade war as a bargaining chip
to get even cheaper U.S. supplies.
State-owned utility Guangdong Yudean Group asked U.S. coal miners to give a
discount on prices after the trade dispute escalated, but was denied, a source
with direct knowledge of the conversation said. The person declined to be
identified because he was not authorized to speak to media.
Guangdong Yudean Group was not available for comment.
China's domestic metallurgical coal market remained tight in August amid a
continuing environmental crackdown in the major producing region Shanxi
province.
Coking coal futures prices were up 12 percent since the start of July to 1,334
yuan ($194.06) on Wednesday.
(Reporting by Meng Meng and Josephine Mason; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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