Research and Markets: Australia Energy Report 2010 Contains Timely Updated Market Data and Continuous Follow-Up of Markets News

DUBLIN–(Business Wire)–
Research and Markets
(http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/d428b3/australia_energy_r) has
announced the addition of the “Australia Energy Report” report to their
offering.

This report provides updated facts and figures on the evolution of the national
energy market. For the oil, gas, coal and power markets, the report details the
market organisation, institutions regulating the market, and energy policy of
the country. Energy companies active on the market are analysed. Domestic
production, capacities, exchanges, consumption by sector and market shares are
provided. Energy prices levels and taxes are described. Finally, the driving
issues, and the market prospects are proposed.

Executive Summary

The Australia energy market report offers a precise and reliable overview of the
energy sector in the country. With a focus on oil, gas, coal and power
markets,the report provides a complete picture of the country situation,
dynamics, current issues and future prospects. With timely updated market data
and continuous follow-up of markets news, this report brings clear and concise
insights, to help tackle national energy challenges and opportunities. The
author publishes energy market reports since 20 years. With highly experienced
energy experts and analysts, and an active professional network, the author is
reckoned as a trustworthy energy source for data, forecasts & analysis,
globally.

Key Topics Covered:

* LIST OF GRAPHS & TABLES
* GENERAL OVERVIEW
* INSTITUTIONS AND ENERGY POLICY
* ENERGY COMPANIES
* ENERGY SUPPLY
* ENERGY PRICES
* ENERGY CONSUMPTION
* ISSUES AND PROSPECTS
* DATA
* TABLES

Companies Mentioned:

* TXU
* Edison Mission Energy
* Macquarie Generation
* Delta Electricity
* North West Shelf (NWS) Venture
* ConocoPhillips
* BHP Billiton
* Anglo Coal Australia
* Rio Tinto
* Xstrata

For more information visit

http://www.researchandmarkets.com/research/d428b3/australia_energy_r

Research and Markets
Laura Wood, Senior Manager,
press@researchandmarkets.com
U.S. Fax: 646-607-1907
Fax (outside U.S.): +353-1-481-1716

Copyright Business Wire 2010

Two Japan smelters set mid-year copper fees with BHP

TOKYO, July 27 (Reuters) – Mitsubishi Materials Corp (5711.T) said on Tuesday it had settled its mid-year copper processing fees with BHP Billiton Ltd (BHP.AX)(BLT.L), but declined to give details.

Sumitomo Metal Mining Co (5713.T) on Monday also said it had agreed fees in mid-year talks with BHP, but did not disclose details.

But analysts and traders said fees were likely set at historic lows.

“We have absolutely no comment at this time,” a smelter official said. “The situation is different from the last time (fees were set) and is very severe. Each firm’s situation is different.”

An official at Pan Pacific Copper, 66 percent owned by JX Nippon Mining & Metals of JX Holdings (5020.T), said the company had not yet settled its mid-year fees.

Based on Reuters data, global smelting capacity has exceeded mining capacity this year.

Analysts and traders have said the fees, known as the treatment charge and the refining charge (TC/RC) and representing smelter profit margins, were expected to be set at around $39 per tonne and 3.9 cents per pound.

That would be about a 16 percent drop from January when full-year fees were set at $46.50/4.65 cents.

“TC/RCs are probably very near break-even levels for many smelters,” said an analyst at a mid-sized Japanese securities firm.

“The declining trend will continue given the tight supply,” the analyst continued, adding fees could see a further drop next year.

Mid-year negotiations cover about 10-20 percent of the volume handled through the year-end agreements for Japanese smelters.

A source at an Asian copper smelter said last week that mid-year copper processing fees are likely to be concluded with miners at a record-low level by the end of this month. [ID:nTOE66J07A]

Smelter capacity is expected to stay larger than concentrate output at least through 2011. In times of tight concentrate supply, companies are forced to offer lower fees to attract sufficient raw materials to keep their smelters running.

Too little concentrate and too many smelters have caused the deficit, which is likely to continue to widen until at least the end of 2012. [ID:nSGE66C07U]

Analysts said some smelters may still be squeezing profits from other operations to offset the damage from diminishing TC/RC, but a steady drop could eventually put some in a very difficult position.

Even if a floor in fees was found, however, fees were unlikely to rebound strongly from low levels, an analyst at another Japanese brokerage said.

A major driver for pushing TC/RC lower is China, which has expanded capacity this year and can accept lower spot fees partly because Chinese smelters can sell a by-product, sulphur acid, with profits at home where there is strong demand from the farming industry. (Additional reporting by Polly Yam in Hong Kong)

REFILE-UPDATE 3-BHP iron ore output record, cautious on outlook

(Changes subsequent references to Credit Suisse economist to Tao)

* BHP’s Q4 iron ore output up, copper down

* Full-year iron output at record 124.9 mln tonnes

* Says cautious on outlook as governments tighten belts

* Says Olympic Dam copper mine returning to normal output * Escondida copper, Cerro Matoso nickel output to drop (Adds more details, analyst quotes, updates share price)

By James Regan

SYDNEY, July 21 (Reuters) – BHP Billiton (BHP.AX)(BLT.L), the world’s biggest mining house, reported a 16 percent jump in quarterly iron ore output on Wednesday, taking annual production to a record, but cautioned over uncertainties surrounding the short-term outlook for commodities markets.

Mounting concerns of a slowdown in recovery in western economies and a waning appetite for industrial raw materials from China — the world’s top consumer of industrial metals — could hit suppliers such as BHP, Rio Tinto (RIO.AX) (RIO.L), Xstrata (XTA.L) and other sector behemoths beefing up output.

“Uncertainty surrounds the near-term prospects for growth in the developed world as governments adjust fiscal policies following a period of significant stimulus and subsequent increase in sovereign debt levels,” BHP said in its June quarter production report.

“Within China, measures introduced to reduce growth to more sustainable levels means volatility in commodity end-demand is likely to persist.”

China, which accounts for about 25 percent of BHP and Rio’s revenue, saw its economic growth moderate in the second quarter, a slowdown likely to continue for the rest of the year as Beijing steers monetary and fiscal policy back to normal after a record credit surge to counter the global crisis. [ID:nTOE66D06L]

According to Dong Tao, chief non-Japan Asia economist at Credit Suisse, the slowdown is much more severe and relevant to countries such as Australia that sell commodities to China.

“What’s behind the slowdown? There’s a drastic inventory correction in the steel sector, and that’s being led by moderation in infrastructure investment,” Tao said.

Until now, analysts have suggested mining companies needed to increase productivity to capture the booming China trade as well as returning demand in the west, particularly for iron ore.

BHP and Rio are spending billions of dollars on so-called “rapid growth projects” in iron ore mining. The two are also aiming to form a joint venture to integrate their separate iron ore businesses in Australia to improve production runs and save $10 billion in repetitive costs.

The partnership still needs approvals from competition regulators.

RECORD IRON ORE OUTPUT

The rise in BHP’s quarterly iron ore output brought annual production from the world’s third largest producer of the steel-making raw material to 124.96 million tonnes, up 9 percent.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For a table on BHP production, click on [ID:nSGE66J004]

For a graphic: r.reuters.com/kad68m ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

The world’s second-largest iron ore producer, Rio last week posted a 2 percent drop in June quarter production but still forecast record output of 234 million tonnes in calendar 2010. [ID:nSGE66D07K]

Rio ranks ahead of BHP Billiton and behind Vale (VALE5.SA) of Brazil in terms of iron ore production.

“They (BHP) are cautious but not throwing in the towel,” said Peter Chilton, analyst at Constellation Capital Management, which owns BHP shares.

“But I think they’re a little bit more cautious than Rio.”

Credit Suisse’s Tao said BHP and Rio needed to voice caution because they think there might be a mismatch between analysts’ expectations and the reality on the ground.

“Chinese demand over the next 12 to 18 months is not going to be as bullish as many people believe” Tao said. “Certainly we shouldn’t be benchmarked against China’s performance over the past five years,” Tao said.

Both BHP and Rio earlier this year threatened to curb growth in iron ore production under a 40 percent Australian “super profit” tax proposed to start in 2012. The tax has since been watered down to 30 percent, which the companies say will not stunt expansion plans.

A decline in iron ore prices has led some analysts to suggest producers such as BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto, Fortescue Metals (FMG.AX) and Vale might rethink production schedules this year. But iron ore prices were now showing signs of bottoming, according to ANZ Bank.

Spot prices .IO62-CNI=SI have remained steady at $118-$120 a tonne for the past week after falling consistently for a month. “A key positive catalyst will be a recovery in Chinese steel prices, which still continue to slide,” said Mark Pervan, head of commodities research for ANZ Bank.

BHP closed up 1.2 percent at A$38.75, outpacing more modest gains in the wider market .AXJO.

COPPER OUTPUT DROPS

BHP, the world’s second-largest copper producer after Chile’s Codelco [CODEL.UL], said fourth-quarter output dropped 5 percent from a year ago, with the company forecasting its Olympic Dam mine operating at full production in the current quarter.

Olympic Dam had been running at only a fifth of its 200,000-tonnes-a-year capacity since a mine accident in October.

It noted a strong performance during the last quarter at its 57.5 percent-owned Escondida, Spence and Cerro Colorado copper mines in Chile. But Escondida production is expected to decline by 5-10 percent this year, mainly due to mining of less rich ore.

Rio holds a 30 percent interest in Escondida, the world’s biggest copper mine. JECO Corp, a consortium formed by Mitsubishi Corp (8058.T), Mitsubishi Materials (5711.T) and Nippon Mining & Metals, owns 10 percent and the World Bank has 2.5 percent. BHP also said it was assessing the impact of the six-month suspension of oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico after Washington in May ordered a temporary halt to 33 exploration rigs as part of a broader response to the BP (BP.L) oil spill.

Drilling at BHP’s Atlantis and Shenzi projects in the Gulf of Mexico were halted as a result.

BHP said it ran its Australian Nickel West division at record levels in 2009/10, enabling it to draw down most of a surplus stockpile of concentrate.

However, during the second half of the 2011 financial year, production from its Cerro Matoso, Colombia nickel division will drop due to a planned replacement of one of its two furnaces. (Additional reporting by Sonali Paul in MELBOURNE; Editing by Himani Sarkar)

UPDATE 1-China Steel to cut Sept prices by average 4 pct

TAIPEI, July 13 (Reuters) – China Steel (2002.TW), Taiwan’s
top steel maker, will cut domestic prices by an average of 4
percent for September from July-August, due mainly to Europe’s
financial troubles and falling demand in China, the company said
on Tuesday.

Moves by Beijing to control an overheated Chinese housing
market dented demand for building materials, a China Steel
executive said.

Asia’s steel makers face a projected peak in profits this
quarter and declines thereafter as China’s demand falters and raw
material prices rise [ID:nSGE66B0DJ].

China’s Baosteel Group said in June that China’s steel
industry will face its toughest time of the year during the third
quarter, as iron ore contract prices will peak in the quarter
while steel consumption by the auto and housing sectors will be
sluggish. [ID:nTOE65703O]

China Steel’s president told Reuters in May that he expected
the price of iron ore to rise 30-50 percent in the third quarter.
[ID:nTOE64H05F]

Top supplier BHP Billiton (BHP.AX)(BLT.L) has sought a 10
percent rise in coking coal prices from Japanese steel makers.
[ID:nSGE64P0KK]

Before the announcement, China Steel shares ended down 0.33
percent, while the main index lost 0.55 percent.

Below is a table of price changes in different products:

PRODUCT PRICE CHANGES PER TONNE

(in Taiwan dollars)

——————————————-

Sheet steel 0

Rods 0

Hot-rolled -1,800

Cold-rolled -1,200

Galvanized steel coil -1,200

Electromagnetic coil 0

Hot dip galvanizing coil -2,528

——————————————-

AVERAGE -1,020 (-4.0 pct)
($1=T$32.1)
(Reporting by Lin Miao-jung, Faith Hung and Ralph Jennings;
Editing by Ken Wills)

Australia mine tax favours multi-nationals-Fortescue

July 13 (Reuters) – Australia’s watered down tax on mining profits favours multi-nationals and diversified commodity producers at the expense of smaller companies, iron ore miner Fortescue Metals (FMG.AX) told a government hearing on Tuesday.

Australia’s initial 40 percent profits tax proposed for the mining sector was changed to 30 percent and exempted all but coal and iron ore miners earning more than A$50 million ($43.82 million) a year.

With profits last year of $508 million, Fortescue is almost certain to pay what’s now called the minerals resource rent tax (MRRT) if it is introduced July 1, 2012 as scheduled.

“Compared to the multi-commodity, multi-national companies which negotiated the MRRT, we have no other minerals to offset the costs associated with the MRRT,” Fortescue Chief Financial Officer Stephen Pearce said in a presentation to the Senate Select Committee on Fuel and Energy.

“The proposed MRRT does not seem fair and, on face value, appears to favour the bigger companies, which have assets that sit outside the MRRT.”

The government sought to end the damaging dispute with mining executives and investors by dumping the far-reaching “super profits” tax, clearing a major hurdle to call an early election, which polls suggest Prime Minister Julia Gillard can win. Three of the world’s biggest mining houses, BHP Billiton (BHP.AX) (BLT.L), Rio Tinto (RIO.AX) (RIO.L) and Xstrata (XTA.L), met privately with Gillard and members of her cabinet to hammer out a compromise.

Under the new tax, Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton will liable on iron ore and coal mining in Australia, while base and precious metals businesses would fall outside the tax. Likewise, Xstrata would only face a tax bill on coal mining.

Pearce said Fortescue was unable to determine the full impact of the proposed new tax as it had not seen the details of the confidential heads of agreement signed by the government and BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and Xstrata.

He also raised doubts about the government’s ability to raise a targeted A$10.5 billion from the tax by 2014. (Reporting by James Regan; Editing by Ed Davies)

European shares turn negative; miners slip

July 12 (Reuters) – European shares turned negative on Monday as miners lost ground, tracking weaker metals prices, after weekend data showed China’s June copper imports fell short of expectations, though overall data surprised on the upside.

At 0719 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top European shares was down 0.2 percent at 1,020.16 points after opening slightly higher.

Miners were among the biggest decliners, with BHP Billiton (BLT.L), Anglo American (AAL.L) and Eurasian Natural Resources (ENRC.L) falling 0.5 to 1 percent.

(Reporting by Atul Prakash)

European shares turn negative; miners slip

July 12 (Reuters) – European shares turned negative on Monday as miners lost ground, tracking weaker metals prices, after weekend data showed China’s June copper imports fell short of expectations, though overall data surprised on the upside.

At 0719 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top European shares was down 0.2 percent at 1,020.16 points after opening slightly higher.

Miners were among the biggest decliners, with BHP Billiton (BLT.L), Anglo American (AAL.L) and Eurasian Natural Resources (ENRC.L) falling 0.5 to 1 percent.

(Reporting by Atul Prakash)

Port Hedland June total iron ore exports up 1.7 pct

July 12 (Reuters) – Iron ore shipments via Australia’s Port Hedland rose 1.7 percent to 15.276 million tonnes in June from 15.02 million tonnes in May, according to port authority figures released on Monday.

China remained the largest destination with shipments of 10.59 million tonnes, up from 9.98 million tonnes in May.

BHP Billiton Ltd/Plc (BHP.AX)(BLT.L) is the port’s biggest user followed by Fortescue Metals Group Ltd (FMG.AX). (Reporting by James Regan; editing by Balazs Koranyi)

Q+A-Small Australia iron ore miners eye tax breaks

By James Regan

SYDNEY July 6 (Reuters) – Australia’s burgeoning magnetite iron ore mining industry is seeking exemption from the country’s new 30 percent tax on iron ore and coal mining due from 2012, arguing it faces additional costs compared to sector giants.

The government watered down the tax last week after talks with top miners including Rio Tinto (RIO.AX) and BHP Billiton (BHP.AX), which only mine higher value hematite ore, but made no distinction for magnetite producers. [ID:nSGE664083]

Here are some questions and answers about hematite and magnetite in Australia:

* WHAT’S THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN HEMATITE AND MAGNETITE ORE?

Hematite — from the Greek for “blood,” for its red colour — is often referred to as direct shipping ore or “DSO” because it is mined and beneficiated via a simple crushing and screening process before export for use in steel mills. Magnetite — iron that is strongly attracted by magnets — has lower iron content and must be upgraded at a cost of about $15 per tonne to yield a suitable equivalent to hematite.

* IS THERE A DIFFERENCE IN IRON ORE GRADES?

Hematite ore in Australia is typically mined with an average iron content of 61 percent. Magnetite, which usually has around 36 percent iron, is used to produce almost half the world’s steel but in Australia accounts for less than 4 percent of overall production. It is mined in Tasamania and Western Australia states.

* WHY IS THERE CHINESE INTEREST IN MAGNETITE?

Australia’s magnetite reserves are being targeted by Chinese firms intent on reducing reliance on the giant hematite deposits mined by Rio Tinto and BHP Billiton. Baosteel Iron & Steel Co 600019.S, Anshan Iron & Steel Group (Ansteel) (0347.HK), Sinosteel, Citi Pacific Mining (0267.HK), China Metallurgical Corp and others are backing projects that industry majors have largely ignored because they contain magnetite ores.

* WHO PAYS THE NEW AUSTRALIAN TAX?

Both hematite and magnetite producers are liable under the tax in its current form, as it applies to all iron ore miners with profits above A$50 million ($42.09 million) a year.

* WHY DO MAGNETITE MINERS WANT SPECIAL TREATMENT?

As the tax now stands, magnetite producers will receive no credit for the cost of upgrading ore to in effect match the iron content of hematite ore.

From the perspective of capital costs, operating costs, processing requirements, and use in steel making, hematite and magnetite might as well be different commodities.

Some analysts, including Credit Suisse, believe it’s almost misleading to refer to both hematite and magnetite as iron ore.

Australian Resources Minister Martin Ferguson met representatives from the magnetite sector this week, and he acknowledged issues needed to be addressed, although gave no guarantees.

HOW MUCH MAGNETITE IS PRODUCED IN AUSTRALIA?

Magnetite output should be around 3.3 million tonnes this year, compared with 440 million tonnes of hematite production. But by 2012, magnetite production should increase to close to 25 million tonnes, largely owing to development work by Gindalbie Metals (GBX.AX) and Grange Resources (GRR.AX). Also, Citic Pacific plans to export the first shipload of iron from its Sino Iron project by the end of next year, rapidly working up to 27 million tonnes per year.

WHAT IS MAGNETITE’S POTENTIAL?

There are more than 20 identified magnetite deposits and prospects in Australia. State by state, this amounts to an estimated 4.7 billion tonnes of magnetite resources in Western Australia, 1.6 billion tonnes in South Australia and 700 million tonnes each in Tasmania and Queensland. ($1=1.188 Australian Dollar) (Editing by Ed Davies)

UPDATE 1-Australia’s QR float plan on track – state gov

July 6 (Reuters) – The Queensland state government vowed on Tuesday to press ahead with the float of its QR National coal transport business despite the postponement of another major Australian IPO and increasingly volatile equity markets.

Germany’s Bilfinger Berger (GBFG.DE) earlier announced it would delay the planned $1.1 billion float of its Australian unit Valemus until early next year due to weak markets. [ID:nLDE6641DX]

“The government notes the decision by Valemus’ parent company. It doesn’t have any direct bearing on our plans to float QR National,” Queensland treasurer Andrew Fraser said in a statement emailed to Reuters.

Queensland state plans an initial public offering of the A$7 billion ($5.88 billion) QR National in the fourth quarter of this year. It would be Australia’s largest float since telecoms company Telstra (TLS.AX) was privatised in states in the 1990s.

The Valemus float, scheduled for this month, was seen by many in the market as testing the appetite for a multi-billion dollar pipeline of IPOs which bankers say have been put on hold due to choppy markets.

“There’s plenty of attractively priced companies out there, so we don’t need to pay a premium for new ones. Therefore vendors have to reset expectations, or are resetting expectations,” said John Grace, portfolio manager at Ausbil Dexia.

The Queensland government pointed out QR National’s leverage to the mining sector and growing demand from Asia for Australian resources differentiated it from Valemus. Fraser said the government had received “significant interest” in the business from potential investors in recent months.

A source close to the transaction said the float timetable had not changed. The offer documents for the IPO were due to go out to investors in August or September.

A group of 13 coal miners, led by BHP Billiton (BHP.AX), Rio Tinto (RIO.AX) and Xstrata (XTA.L), have sought to derail the IPO plans by making their own A$4.85 billion cash bid for the rail-track network in the country’s biggest coal state.

They argue that a vertically-integrated model where the company owned both the haulage service and the tracks could hurt coal transport efficiency and competition. (Reporting by Michael Smith and Sonali Paul; Editing by Narayanan Somasundaram and Ed Davies)

Miners, banks push FTSE down; BP up on interest

LONDON, July 5 (Reuters) – Britain’s top shares fell early on Monday with banks and miners lower as investors remained downbeat on the sustainability of the global economic recovery after disappointing U.S. job figures in the previous session.

By 0811 GMT, the FTSE 100 .FTSE was down 9.09 points, or 0.2 percent at 4,829.00, having closed 0.7 percent higher on Friday.

Volumes in London were muted, with U.S. markets closed on Monday for Independence Day, celebrated the previous day, and relatively little in the way of company or macroeconomic data to provide further evidence on the state of the global economy.

“It’s been a pretty lacklustre opening with no direction to come from Wall Street. But we are coming into a pivotal few weeks earnings wise,” said Richard Hunter, head of UK equities at Hargreaves Lansdown.

“Three months ago the vast majority of companies managed to beat analysts’ expectations and that is the kind of positive catalyst we’ll need this time round to give the markets a shot in the arm, with sentiment dominated by Europe and the stalling of the global economic recovery.”

Miners were on the back foot, with demand concerns lingering after data on Friday showed U.S. non-farm payrolls dropped by 125,000, the largest fall since October.

African Barrick Gold (ABGL.L) and BHP Billiton (BLT.L) were top fallers among the miners, down 2.4 and 1.7 percent respectively.

Banks were also weaker as concerns remained over their exposure to Europe’s sovereign debt crisis, with Royal Bank of Scotland (RBS.L) and Barclays (BARC.L) the two biggest fallers in the sector down 0.6 and 1.0 percent.

However, UBS said in note that running a credit stress test along the lines of the U.S. tests of 2009 would see all the major European banks pass.

London’s blue chip index lost 3.9 percent last week after shedding 13.4 percent in June with investor doubts mounting worries over the sustainability of the global recovery.

KUWAIT EYES BP ASSETS

Embattled oil major BP (BP.L) was a strong performer, up 2.1 percent, helped by a Kuwait newspaper report that said OPEC member Kuwait may buy some of BP’s (BP.L) Middle East and Asian assets as part of the British oil company’s attempt to raise funds and fend off takeover bids. [ID:nLDE6640A8]

The company is looking for a shareholder willing to buy a 5 to 10 percent stake at a cost of up to 6 billion pounds. BP’s rivals Exxon (XOM.N), Total (TOTF.PA) and Royal Dutch Shell (RDSa.L) have all been touted as possible bidders, according to weekend newspaper reports.

Elsewhere, TUI Travel (TT.L) gained 1.4 pct, among the top FTSE 100 .FTSE gainers, as UBS upped its stance for the tour operator to “buy” from “neutral” on valuation grounds, though it lowered its price target to 250 pence, from 265 pence.

And Marks and Spencer (MKS.L), Britain’s No.1 clothing retailer, rose 1.2 percent ahead of results due on Wednesday. (Editing by Karen Foster)

UPDATE 1-Australia govt, miners on brink of tax deal-report

July 1 (Reuters) – Australia’s government and key mining companies are on the brink of a framework agreement on a mining tax compromise, the Sydney Morning Herald reported, quoting sources with knowledge of the talks.

Based on the proposed deal, the government has given ground on the headline 40 percent tax rate and the new trigger point for the tax would be around 12 percent up from an initial proposal for about 5 percent, the paper said on its website.

The tax deal would also give miners a break on retrospective projects, enabling them to roll lucrative iron ore operations in the Pilbara and coal mines on the east coast, into the new tax regime at market value.

“It’s understood that BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and Xstrata have agreed with the government now on the key elements of a new resources tax structure…,” the Herald report said, citing sources close to talks between the government and miners.

The government and global miners Rio Tinto (RIO.L) (RIO.AX), BHP Billiton (BHP.AX) (BLT.L) and Xstrata Plc (XTA.L), are locked in a second day of talks on Thursday over the tax.

“We’re not commenting,” a BHP spokesman said of the report.

Government officials were not immediately available for comment.

The Australian dollar AUD=D4 rose around 1/3 percent to $0.8366 from around $0.08335 before the report.

An agreement would remove uncertainty in the market and any watering down of the tax proposal is considered positive for investments and hence the Aussie dollar, traders say.

The stock market .AXJO also came off its lows off the day, as did global miners BHP Billiton and Rio tinto, on news of the report.

The proposed mining tax threatens more than $20 billion in investment, according to mining companies, but no major project has yet been scrapped and several have actually been advanced since the tax was unveiled on May 2.

The Australian mining index .AXMMA has underperformed the global mining sector .TGLOB100 by about 4 percent since the mining tax was first announced on May 2, despite a weakening in the Australian dollar over that time.

Analysts say that any firm deal would be a positive for mining shares as it removes a key risk factor while any easing in terms of the tax would be a clear positive as investor have already priced in the worst-case scenario.

“This would signal the first major development in the debate between the government and the mining industry over the tax,” said Grant Craighead, a mining analyst for Stock Resource in Sydney. (Reporting by Michael Perry; Editing by Ed Davies)

New Australian PM pledges to end mine tax row

(Reuters) – New Australia Prime Minister Julia Gillard pledged to end a mining tax row as soon as possible after spending her first day in power speaking to world leaders and assuring Washington of Canberra’s commitment to Afghanistan.

World | Stocks | Global Markets

The Labor government appointed Gillard as prime minister on Thursday, fearing defeat at elections later this year as voters deserted incumbent Kevin Rudd over his handling of the tax row and a failed climate policy.

Global miners such as BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto say a planned 40 percent “super profits” tax will damage the resource-dependent economy which underpinned Australia through the global financial crisis.

“My priority obviously is that we deal with the question of the mining tax,” Gillard told a news conference.

“It has caused us uncertainty. I think that uncertainty has caused anxiety for Australians. I want to make sure Australians get a fair share of our mineral wealth, but we want to genuinely negotiate.”

Deputy Prime Minister and Treasurer Wayne Swan signaled on Friday the government was open to renegotiate the tax headline rate. Miners want the tax scrapped or for the government to lower the 40 percent headline rate and raise the 6 percent profit threshold to 12 percent.

No fresh mine tax talks are expected before Gillard’s new cabinet is sworn in and with Swan at the G20 meeting until Wednesday.

Global miner Xstrata Plc on Friday called on Gillard to exclude existing projects from the proposed tax.

“We will participate in those negotiations in good faith but believe that it is of the utmost importance that negotiations are concluded as rapidly as possible to avoid further damage to the industry’s growth prospects in Australia,” Xstrata said in a statement to Reuters.

WORLD LEADERS

Gillard, Australia’s first female prime minister, said she had also spent her first morning as leader, “introducing” herself to other world leaders, including U.S. President Barack Obama.

“I fully support the current deployment and I indicated to President Obama that he should expect to see Australia’s efforts in Afghanistan counting,” she said.

Australia has about 1,500 troops in Afghanistan and will start to reduce troop numbers in two to four years after Afghan forces take over security operations in Uruzgan province.

Sixteen Australians have been killed in Afghanistan since late 2001. An opinion poll published on Monday found 61 percent of those surveyed believed Australia should withdraw its troops, while 24 percent believed troop numbers should be maintained.

Gillard is also not expected to shift policy toward China, Australia’s largest trade partner and a big buyer of commodities such as iron ore and coal.

Unlike her predecessor Rudd, a Mandarin-speaking former diplomat, Gillard has little foreign policy experience and is expected to rely more on current Foreign Minister Stephen Smith. However, analysts said could also appoint Rudd as her foreign minister.

Miners welcomed Gillard’s appointment, but called for a “sign of good faith” that the government was genuine in its desire to resolve the tax row.

“This is a major breakthrough as previous negotiations were never serious,” said Macarthur Coal Chairman Keith De Lacy.

But De Lacy said that in order to demonstrate good faith the government needed to remove A$12 billion ($10.41 billion) in mining tax-related revenue from the forward budget estimates.

“It is not possible to negotiate in good faith with a big hairy monster like that looking over your shoulder,” said De Lacy.

“In return the mining industry would be fair dinkum (genuine) in its desire to negotiate a fair return for the use of the non-renewable resources that belonged to all Australians.”

(Additional Reporting Michael Perry and Jim Regan in Sydney; Editing by Ed Davies)

DEALS-Australia M&A deals fall nearly a third in H1

June 25 (Reuters) – Mergers and acquisitions involving Australian firms fell 30.6 percent in the first half of 2010 from a year earlier to $63.4 billion, although cross-border activity was steady and private equity interest returned, according to Thomson Reuters data.

Private Capital

The preliminary data, released on Friday, showed deal activity where Australia was the target nation fell 45.7 percent to $48.4 billion in the half from a year ago.

The comparable data in the 2009 first half included BHP Billiton BHP,AX and Rio Tinto’s (RIO.AX) massive iron ore joint venture valued at $58 billion.

The materials sector was the most active in the first half of 2010 with 345 deals worth $23.2 billion.

Newcrest Mining’s (NCM.AX) $9.2 billion takeover offer for Lihir Gold (LGL.AX) is the largest deal involving an Australian firm for the year so far.

Private equity activity also showed signs of recovery compared to a year ago, increasing almost three times from the first-half of 2009 to $2.6 billion. Two private equity consortiums are currently in talks to buy Healthscope (HSP.AX).

Cross-border deals were on a par with last year at about $26.5 billion, the data showed.

The preliminary data included include bids for toll-road operator Transurban (TCL.AX) and Macarthur Coal (MCC.AX) which have since been withdrawn

Lazard held the top spot for mergers and acquisitions advice for 2010 so far, according to the latest league table data which did not include the Transurban and Macarthur figures.

Lazard advised on $13.5 billion worth of deals. It was followed by Bank of America Merrill Lynch with $11.8 billion and Macquarie Group with $11.6 billion. <^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For more on the M&A data [ID:nN24244594] ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

(Reporting by Michael Smith; Editing by Ed Davies)

European shares turn negative; miners fall

June 24 (Reuters) – European shares turned negative on Thursday morning, with miners giving up gains from early in the session, having risen on hopes Australia’s new Prime Minister would compromise on proposed taxes on resource firms.

Stocks | European Markets | Global Markets

At 0730 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top European shares was down 0.4 percent at 1,035.76 points.

BHP Billiton (BLT.L), Kazakhmys (KAZ.L), Rio Tinto (RIO.L) and Xstrata (XTA.L) were between 1 and 2.7 percent lower. (Reporting by Brian Gorman)

European shares rise in early trade; miners gain

June 24 (Reuters) – European shares rose in early trade on Thursday, with miners leading on hopes that proposals for a super tax in Australia will be diluted after a change of prime minister.

Stocks | Global Markets

At 0706 GMT, the FTSEurofirst 300 .FTEU3 index of top European shares was up 0.3 percent at 1,043.16 points, after falling 1 percent in the previous session.

Miners gained on hopes that Australia’s new leader, Julia Gillard, will compromise on proposals for increased taxes on resource companies.

Antofagasta (ANTO.L), BHP Billiton (BLT.L), Kazakhmys (KAZ.L) and Xstrata (XTA.L) rose between 0.8 and 1.2 percent.

“It seems to be more confirmation that any plans for a 40 percent resources tax have been watered down significantly,” said Bernard McAlinden, investment strategist at NCB Stockbrokers in Dublin.

“The market is still in a range, and maybe it can trade towards the top of it. ”

The U.S. Federal Reserve renewed its vow to hold benchmark interest rates exceptionally low on Wednesday, but downgraded its assessment of the economic recovery. (Reporting by Brian Gorman)

RPT-GLOBAL MARKETS-Asian stocks steady, dollar down after Fed

HONG KONG, June 24 (Reuters) – Asian stocks mostly steadied while the dollar eased on Thursday amid concerns over the global outlook after the Federal Reserve said the economic recovery was faltering.

European shares are expected to open firmer after two consecutive sessions of losses, with futures for the STOXX Europe 50 STXEc1, Germany’s DAX FDXc1 and France’s CAC 40 FCEc1 gaining as much as 0.7 percent.

In Asia, South Korean shares outperformed its regional peers and rose 0.8 percent while Australian miners gained after the ruling party chose a new leader, spurring hopes that the government would compromise on a controversial mining tax. [ID:nSGE65N003]

But other markets were mostly steady to weaker, with the MSCI index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan .MIAPJ0000PUS up just 0.2 percent.

“It’s not as if investor sentiment has worsened dramatically, but gains look limited as there’s uncertainty about the outlook for the global economy,” said Yutaka Miura, a senior technical analyst at Mizuho Securities.

Japan’s Nikkei .N225 ended flat as a key support level held.

The euro EUR= and sterling GBP= rose but investors remained reluctant to chase them higher as sings of fragile economic recovery tempered appetite for risky positions.

Oil prices steadied, stabilising after two days of losses under the influence of modest gains in regional equities and dovish comments from the U.S. Federal Reserve. [ID:nSGE65N03H]

STOCK RALLY FIZZLES

South Korea’s KOSPI rose 0.8 percent as the government lifted its 2010 growth forecast to 5.8 percent from 5 percent and announced a gradual return of economic policy to pre-crisis settings. [ID:nTOE65N03N]

Global miners BHP Billiton (BHP.AX) and Rio Tinto (RIO.AX) rose around 1.5 percent, encouraged by new Prime Minister Julia Gillard’s comments seeking negotiations with the miners over the tax. [ID:nSGE65N003] Fortescue Metals Group (FMG.AX) rose 2.5 percent.

Asian stocks are on track to post their first quarterly decline in over a year as fears of the euro zone debt crisis derailing a global economic recovery prompted a sharp selloff in risky assets.

The MSCI index of Asia Pacific shares outside Japan is down 5.5 percent this quarter versus a 6.6 percent decline in the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index .SPX over the same period.

The heightened volatility across financial markets in May spooked investors who have remained largely on the sidelines keeping stock exchange volumes lethargic.

Optimism over China’s move to allow the yuan to be more flexible quickly dissipated after the move failed to ignite a sustained rally in risky assets as realisation set in that any appreciation in the yuan would be slow at best.

Barring unexpected events, the markets’ focus for the second half of the year looks set to be firmly on policy around exit strategies from the global financial crisis, Alastair Newton of Nomura said in a note. (Additional reporting by Aiko Hayashi in Tokyo; Editing by Kazunori Takada)

Australia’s Alinta receives preliminary bids-sources

June 22 (Reuters) – BHP Billiton Ltd (BHP.AX)(BLT.L) and Origin Energy (ORG.AX) are among parties which have submitted preliminary bids for Australia’s Alinta Energy (AEJ.AX), according to people familiar with the process.

Saudi Arabia’s Acwa Power International, French utility GDF Suez (GSZ.PA) and Canadian diversified services Group ATCO (ACOx.TO) have also put in bids, the sources said Tuesday.

The debt-laden Alinta owns stakes in 12 power stations across Australia and New Zealand and is Western Australia’s largest gas and electricity retailer.

But the group has been struggling with high leverage and crippling interest costs since the global financial crisis. It has an outstanding A$2.7 billion ($2.37 billion) loan, and needs to repay a minimum A$250 million by March 2011 under new terms struck in December. NM Rothschild & Sons is advising the lenders.

Origin has teamed up with Australia pipeline operator APA Group (APA.AX) and Japan’s Marubeni Corp (8002.T) to submit a consortium bid for the entire portfolio, three sources said.

ATCO Power, a wholly owned subsidiary of ATCO, operates a 86 MW gas-fired power project in Karratha, located in northern Western Australia.

BHP had expressed interest in Alinta’s Newman and Port Hedland power stations, which supply power to its iron ore production facilities in the Pilbara region in Western Australia, the sources said.

Preliminary expressions of interest were received about two weeks ago, sources said.

Public relations officials at Alinta, BHP, Origin and APA declined to comment.

Officials at Marubeni, Acwa and GDF were not immediately available to comment.

UBS, which is advising Alinta on the asset sales, declined to comment.

Alinta is also pursuing a re-capitalisation of the company with Macquarie Capital Advisers and UBS advising.

The company’s directors are being advised by Lazard to oversee the entire process.

The debt has attracted interest from distressed debt funds and proprietary trading desks of investment banks. WestLB last week sold a A$50 million tranche of debt at 75 cents, said the sources.

The German bank joins other lenders such as Commonwealth Bank of Australia and Suncorp Metway who have previously sold in the secondary market.

Two banking sources expressed scepticism that Alinta would find a bidder for the assets at the right price because it would be too difficult getting a majority of the debt holders to agree. Breaking up assets would also be tricky.

“Many have not bought in low enough to get a good return. Because the debt sits across all of the assets it is very hard to sell off individual assets,” a banking source said.

Another source with direct knowledge of the process denied media reports that Origin had acquired any of Alinta’s debt. (Additional reporting by Sonali Paul; Editing by Ed Davies)

BHP, Rio, Xstrata: Australia tax concerns not met

June 16 (Reuters) – Mining giants BHP Billiton (BHP.AX)(BLT.L), Rio Tinto (RIO.AX)(RIO.L) and Xstrata (XTA.L) said on Wednesday their key concerns about Australia’s proposed mining tax had yet to be addressed.

They asked the government in a meeting to ensure the resources super profits tax would not be applied to existing projects, was set at an internationally competitive tax rate and provided stable arrangements for taxes and royalties on existing and new projects. (Reporting by Sonali Paul; Editing by Ed Davies)

RPT-Port Hedland May total iron ore exports up 2.9 pct

June 15 (Reuters) – Iron ore shipments via Australia’s Port Hedland rose 2.9 percent to 15.02 million tonnes in May from 14.59 million tonnes in April, according to port authority figures released on Tuesday.

Basic Materials

China remained the largest destination with shipments of 9.98 million tonnes versus 10.9 million tonnes in April.

BHP Billiton Ltd/Plc (BHP.AX)(BLT.L) is the port’s biggest user followed by Fortescue Metals Group Ltd (FMG.AX). (Reporting by James Regan; Editing by Mark Bendeich)