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S. America frets over slow China growth
by Staff Writers
Rio De Janeiro (UPI) Mar 19, 2012

Australia boosts presence in key partner China
Sydney (AFP) March 20, 2012 - Australia said Tuesday broadening its diplomatic presence in key trade partner China was a priority as it announced its intention to open a new consulate-general in the city of Chengdu.

China is Australia's largest trade partner and a major investor in its vital resources sector, with total trade valued at over Aus$113 billion (US$119 billion) in 2010-11.

The country is also Australia's fastest growing and most valuable international tourism market.

Prime Minister Julia Gillard said the new mission in the Sichuan provincial capital would "help boost trade and business links", calling the China relationship a "priority" for the government.

"The new consulate-general will increase our diplomatic footprint and will help build on our ever-growing relationship with China," she said.

Australia already has embassies or consulates in Beijing, Shanghai, Guangzhou and Hong Kong with the Chengdu office its the first new diplomatic mission in China since 1986.

Many Australian companies, including Bluescope Steel, Rheem, ANZ and Cochlear, are already active in western China with the new office opening once formal paperwork is completed.


Latin American countries see a Chinese economic slowdown and eurozone crisis as major threats that could reverse their own gains in recent years, an Inter-American Development Bank report said.

Current projections for growth in Central and South American economies are down from recent trends, amid fears over China's future direction and eurozone woes. Further concerns that a U.S. economic recovery may not be as robust as expected have added to a changing outlook on the region's emergent markets.

Overseas cash infusions drawn to attractive interest rates in Brazil, Argentina and other countries kept the region flush with new money but also dampened demand for exports as national currencies soared against the dollar.

More Latin American monetary regulators see overseas investment inflows as a mixed blessing than they did last year, analysts said.

IADB called the recent upsurge in capital inflows "potentially dangerous."

The biggest worry, however, remains in trends in commodity prices and China's future demand for Latin American minerals and ores.

Latin American commodity prices could lose up to 30 percent of current values if China's economic growth slowed during the year, IADB President Luis Alberto Moreno said in the report.

"The biggest risks to Latin America are not internal it's more about what happens outside Latin America," Moreno said.

Food and commodity prices, although under pressure, are likely to prove more resilient than prices for metals that respond quickly to any perceptions of slowing growth not only in China but worldwide.

Chile and Peru are major exporters of copper and other minerals and metals while Argentina and Brazil, despite industrialization, still depend on grain and cereal exports for foreign currency earnings.

Problems in Europe have already dampened demand for South American exports.

Eurozone financial troubles have also prompted European banks to cut back on investments in Latin America, with subsidiary banks currently at the center of a brisk mergers and acquisitions activity.

Current Chinese projections of 7.5 percent growth in 2012 -- although impressive -- would mark the lowest percentage in eight years.

A much-awaited EU free trade pact with Latin America remains elusive because of disagreements within the Mercosur trade bloc and Argentina's restrictive policies affecting both EU and regional partners.

Last week EU trade ministers agreed a free trade pact with Colombia and Peru that could boost European car and chemical exports and lift food and mineral exports from the South American countries.

The EU said the agreement could boost Colombian and Peruvian economies and open them to more EU investment.

The trade pacts, however, are modest when compared with a regional trade pact being sought by Mercosur. Negotiations on a draft have been slow.

Peru is among the fast-growing economies that are exposed to the risks of price fluctuations in their commodity exports. Peru recorded a 6.9 percent growth last year, built largely on commodity exports.

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BHP sees iron ore demand 'flattening'
Sydney (AFP) March 20, 2012 - Global mining giant BHP Billiton said Tuesday that Chinese iron ore demand appeared to be flattening as the world's second-largest economy slows, but prices were expected to hold up.

BHP iron ore president Ian Ashby said he was confident that China would meet its five-year economic growth targets but iron ore demand would soon hit "single digits if it's not already there".

China, the world's largest consumer of raw materials, announced a growth target of 7.5 percent for 2012, a marked downgrade from last year's 9.2 percent growth and 10.4 percent in 2010.

Its economy swung to a trade deficit of US$31.48 billion in February, according to the latest figures, with crude oil and other raw materials imports soaring while exports were further hit by weak demand in Europe and the US.

But Ashby said he expected iron ore prices, now at around US$145 a tonne, to hold at US$120 due to limits on China's own production, and BHP saw a solid future for the key steelmaking commodity in the longer term.

"The pie is big and they are still growing their steel industry," Ashby told reporters at an Australian mining conference.

Rio Tinto said it also remained confident in the iron ore outlook in China.

"Although the rate of GDP growth in China is more immediately slowing we remain confident on the basis of the figures we have seen of a soft landing, with solid growth for this year," David Joyce, Rio's managing director expansion projects, told the conference.

He said the world's iron ore mines would have to produce an extra 100 million tonnes annually to meet Chinese demand in the next seven years, with global supply "still significantly lag(ging) behind possible consumption".

"Five hundred million tonnes is required to satisfy expected demand growth and 200 million tonnes to replace high cost supply exit," he said.

Ashby said BHP was poised to respond to cooling demand but "we haven't slowed down any of the work that allows us to make a decision", adding that its iron ore expansion project was going "full steam ahead".

BHP chief Marius Kloppers warned last month that the company stood ready to scale back production at unprofitable operations as commodity prices fluctuated.

Iron ore had been the exception, with Kloppers saying it would take a "fairly big event" to knock expansion plans off course because freight costs were low and shipments were expected to be profitable even if prices softened.

By 2050 Ashby said 73 percent of China's 1.4 billion population was expected to be urbanised, compared with 47 percent in 2010. Car production was forecast to boom 155 percent by 2025 to 28 million units per year.

Ashby said China's steel production capacity would hit 1.1 billion tonnes by 2025, compared with 700 million tonnes presently.

The commodities-driven Australian dollar slumped on the remarks to US$1.0583 from US$1.0620 earlier in the day.

-- Dow Jones Newswires contributed to this report --



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