By Robb M. Stewart 
 

MELBOURNE--China's appetite for commodities continues to grow and, with the steady recovery in the U.S. economy, should support prices for raw materials such as iron ore and copper, portfolio managers for BlackRock Inc.'s (BLK) natural resources equity team said Tuesday.

Catherine Raw, co-manager of BlackRock's BGF World Mining Fund, told reporters in Australia that slower growth in China's economy still translates into strong commodities demand but that this hasn't been reflected in share prices for the mining industry. At the same time, the euro zone crisis is currently less of a concern, and the U.S. economy has performed better than some people had expected early in the year, she said.

"We still see share prices predicting a very pessimistic outlook," Ms. Raw said during a conference call.

Ms. Raw said the copper industry continues to struggle with declining ore grades and bringing enough production into the market to meet expected demand, which will support the price of the metal. Similarly, a big jump in output of iron ore that is planned by mining companies will take longer to develop and cost more, with a number of companies having delayed or cancelled developments this year after a slump in the price of the steel-making raw ingredient, she said.

However, she said the BlackRock-managed investment portfolio of Australia-listed Global Mining Investments Ltd. (GMI.AU), had moved to an underweight position on platinum this year based on increasing concerns over operating conditions in South Africa, the world's biggest producer of the metal.

GMI's portfolio underperformed its benchmark in the three months through September, returning 3% against a 6% rise in the HSBC Global Mining Index, largely because of an overweight position in iron ore producers in a period when the price of the commodity fell sharply.

Prices for iron ore fell sharply as Chinese steel mills worked through stockpiles and slowed output, with the spot price dropping by about one third in just two months to as low as US$86.70 a metric ton in early September before staging a recovery back above US$100 a ton.

Ms. Raw said iron ore appeared to be well supported at about US$120 a ton, roughly where the spot market price was trading this week.

Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com

Subscribe to WSJ: http://online.wsj.com?mod=djnwires

Global Mining Investments (ASX:GMI)
Gráfico Histórico do Ativo
De Jun 2024 até Jul 2024 Click aqui para mais gráficos Global Mining Investments.
Global Mining Investments (ASX:GMI)
Gráfico Histórico do Ativo
De Jul 2023 até Jul 2024 Click aqui para mais gráficos Global Mining Investments.