Rio
Tinto's Australia-listed shares were set to shed nearly A$2
billion in value, BHP more than A$10 billion, and Fortescue
Metals over A$4 billion.
Lower output from Chinese steel mills has hit demand for iron
ore, while prices of commodities like copper and aluminium have
slumped on worries that aggressive interest rate hikes by the
U.S. Federal Reserve's and other central banks could tip the
global economy into a recession. [MET/L]
The three Australian mining behemoths, so far this month, have
already lost roughly A$30 billion of their combined market
value, and are facing a third straight week of losses after
hitting multi-week lows on Monday.
Rio Tinto and BHP are trading at a one-month low, while
Fortescue is at a three-month low.
"Are we doomed? Or is it darkest before dawn?," Jefferies
analysts wrote on Saturday with reference to recent economic
data, China's COVID-19 lockdowns and the Fed's policy narrative.
They seemed to lean towards the latter, confident that the
slowdown in demand for commodities would be followed by a
recovery that would be led by miners, adding that recession
fears and inflation would give way to recovery.
Analysts at JP Morgan also echoed risks to the sector but said
fresh policy support along with easing COVID-19 lockdowns in
China would spur a rebound in the second half of 2022, and
maintained their "neutral" view on Rio Tinto and BHP.
Graphic: Aussie miners tumble in June amid commodity rout -
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/zgvomdkwjvd/Pasted%20image%201655698303129.png
($1 = 1.4382 Australian dollars)
(Reporting by Shashwat Awasthi; Editing by Shailesh Kuber)
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