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Message: Nickel to Rebound 9% in FY 20

Nickel to Rebound 9% in FY 20

posted on Sep 05, 2009 09:59AM

Nickel to rebound 9pct in FY20: Minara 4-September-09 by AAP

The nickel price is expected to rise by about nine per cent in 2009/10 amid signs of recovery in China's stainless steel market, Minara Resources Ltd chief executive Peter Johnston says.

"Nickel demand and production in 2009 decreased 20 per cent and we're expecting a rebound of about nine per cent in 2010," Mr Johnston told a business function in Perth on Friday.

The nickel price is now about $US18,300 a tonne, which compares to a high of about $US55,000 at the height of China's steel-making boom in 2007 and a 2008 low of $US8,900 as it curtailed steel production.

Mr Johnston said the dip was "aberrant" and unlikely to be repeated.

"I didn't think it would last," he said.

However, London Metals Exchange nickel stockpiles are currently at the highest levels since they began being recorded in 1990, which indicated nickel price volatility was set to continue in the short term.

Mr Johnston said China's nickel consumption was "showing sign of recovery" but a rebound in Europe and the US was needed also.

"Europe worries me - it's very soft," he said.

"Japan is also extraordinarily soft.

"There are some signs east Asia and the US might be improving.

"If it's just a China story, the industry will remain vulnerable."

He also said any nickel miner who believed they could develop a processing plant for laterites - the most technically challenging variety of nickel - for less than $4 billion was kidding themselves.

The vast majority of the world's nickel - 70 per cent - resides in laterite ores.

"I would suggest with BHP's experience with Ravensthorpe (in WA) and particularly Vale's experience with Goro (in New Caledonia), you would need about $4 billion to start a nickel laterite plant," Mr Johnston said.

"Anyone who think they can do it cheaper is mistaken and I've got the scars to prove it.

" Minara, formerly the Andrew Forrest-chaired Anaconda Nickel, endured many years of problems processing laterites at its Murrin Murrin project in Western Australia.

The company said last week that the mine, which also produces cobalt, was operating "on a consistent production platform in line with budgets". ยป.

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