$1 Aussie coal mines turn to jackpots as China's cuts power price rally

Buying bargain-bin coal mines amid the worst commodity slump in a generation has turned into a savvy bet as prices of the fuel surge.

Stanmore Coal bought the Isaac Plains metallurgical coal mine in Queensland from Brazil's Vale and Japan's Sumitomo Corporation for just $1 in July 2015, when the price of met coal, used to make steel, averaged the lowest in about a decade and just three years after the mine was valued at $860 million.

Queensland's Isaac Plains coal mine is turning into black gold for its new owner.
Queensland's Isaac Plains coal mine is turning into black gold for its new owner. Photo: Glenn Hunt

"It seems like we did get our timing right in this instance," said Stanmore's chief executive Nick Jorss. "When we bought Isaac Plains, hard coking coal was in the $US70s. We've had pretty substantial movement since then."

Coking coal prices have surged more than 150 per cent this year as output from China, the world's biggest miner, tumbles under pressure from the government to cut overcapacity even as demand from steelmakers surges.

Stanmore, which has seen its share price double since the beginning of last month, isn't the only miner who bought low. The tiny ASX-listed miner TerraCom last week completed the purchase of the Blair Athol thermal coal mine, also for $1, from Rio Tinto as the world's second-biggest miner exits some of its local coal portfolio. Thermal coal in Australia, while unable to match coking coal's rally, has risen more than 50 per cent this year.

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'Brave enough'

Miners who struck deals before the recent price surge were well placed to profit from the unexpected revival, even if they're small producers, said Robin Griffin, research director for global metallurgical coal markets at consultancy Wood Mackenzie.

One year later, spot prices have soared above $US200 a ton as China's steel mills crank out record volumes while its mines slow production.

"They were brave enough to make the call to try and make it work," Griffin said. "They wouldn't have foreseen this spike, but they would have had a more optimistic view perhaps. So, in some respects, you could argue their gut feeling was justified."

While the $1 headline price appears a bargain, Griffin notes the deals come with costly commitments. Stanmore is responsible for a $32 million obligation for the Isaac Plains mine, in Queensland, while TerraCom is also on the hook for costs related to rehabilitating the mine.

Master stroke?

Stanmore is targeting 1.1 million metric tons of coal a year from Isaac Plains, while TerraCom hopes to ship 2 million tons annually. Australia, which is the world's largest coking coal producer, exported 186 million tons last year, according to Wood Mackenzie.

Japan's Electric Power Development Company, which owned Blair Athol with Rio Tinto and is known as J-Power, said it decided to sell its stake to a company that was willing to recover the remaining coal resources, according to a  spokesman. Sumitomo, Rio Tinto and Vale declined to comment.

Stanmore's Jorss expects coking coal contract prices for the fourth-quarter to rise above $US150 a ton, from the current quarter's $US92.50. Analysts at Macquarie Group forecast deals will be agreed at $US170 a ton, which is still far short of the record of $US330 a ton in 2011.

"If they have material to sell, the funds will just roar in this quarter," Wood Mackenzie's Griffin said. "If prices continue into the next quarter and into the first quarter of 2017, it will look like a master stroke."

TerraCom chairman Cameron McRae, a former Rio Tinto executive, said there were good bargains to be found in unwanted coal assets.

"The extent of the commodity down-cycle has put a lot of miners under pressure and you've seen companies sell up because their balance sheets require it," McRae said. "When you see a significant down-cycle you will always see assets come onto the market."

Bloomberg

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