Global mining group Rio Tinto restarts Mongolian copper project

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Updated 25 January 2022
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Global mining group Rio Tinto restarts Mongolian copper project

Rio Tinto, a Toronto listed mining group, is once again going ahead with its most important growth project, the Oyu Tolgoi copper mine in Mongolia.

The project began after the company reached an agreement with the government of Mongolia, and solved key issues hindering the $7 billion expansion of the project.

On Jan. 25, an underground caving process was launched, which means that the mine will start production in the first half of next year.

Rio Tinto had previously refused to start the undercut until it ended its dispute with the Mongolian government. Rio Tinto-controlled subsidiary company Turquoise Hill Resources, which owns the majority of the Oyu Tolgoi project, has been fighting with Ulan Batur for years over how to split the cost of an underground expansion that is more than $1 billion over budget and several years late.  

Rio Tinto and its subsidiary have agreed to write off $2.4 billion of loans and interest used by the Mongolian Government to fund its share of the development costs, according to the Financial Times. The government will let the company extend an existing deal to import power from China to at least 2026, followed by another extension until 2030 if a domestic energy source is not made available, according to the newspaper.

“The size and the complexity [of the project] requires an aligned way forward, and we haven’t had that for years, I have to admit,” Rio Tinto Chief Executive Jakob Stausholm said in an interview quoted by the Wall Street Journal. “So it is a big, big step forward.”

Rio has mined copper from an open pit mine at Oyu Tolgoi for a decade. Given that much of the deposit lies deeper below the Earth’s surface, it has been difficult for the company to reach the ore.

Once at full speed, the Oyu Tolgoi project will be one of the biggest copper mines in the world, producing at peak capacity 500,000 tons a year of the metal. It will also double Rio’s copper division output, according to the Financial Times


GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares skid as oil blasts past $100 after Iran strikes Gulf shipping

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GLOBAL MARKETS-Shares skid as oil blasts past $100 after Iran strikes Gulf shipping

SYDNEY: Shares in Asia fell broadly on Thursday as oil prices roared 9 percent past $100 a barrel on reports of more ships struck in Gulf waters and terminal shutdowns — a jump that could rapidly stoke inflation and push global borrowing costs higher.

Investors took little comfort from the International Energy Agency’s plan to release 400 million barrels of oil from its reserves, the largest such move in its history. As part of that, the US said it would release 172 million barrels of oil from next week.

Brent crude futures jumped 9.2 percent to $100.37 a barrel, extending a rise of more than 4 percent overnight. US crude futures surged 8.1 percent to $94.26 a barrel.

Shares slid, with MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan falling 1.5 percent, while the Nikkei dropped 1.4 percent.

Chinese blue-chips lost 0.6 percent and Hong Kong’s Hang Seng index skidded 1.2 percent.

Both S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq futures fell 0.9 percent. EUROSTOXX 50 futures were down 0.8 percent and DAX futures lost 1 percent.

Two fuel tankers in Iraqi waters had been struck by explosive-laden Iranian boats, Iraqi security officials said early on Thursday, while an Iraqi official told state media that its oil ports “have completely stopped operations.”

Bloomberg reported that Oman has evacuated all vessels from its key oil export terminal at Mina Al Fahal as a precautionary measure.

“The market remains very concerned in terms of what’s going on in the Strait of Hormuz, and basically, information that we are getting over the last 24 hours is not a good reading,” said Rodrigo Catril, a senior FX strategist at NAB.

“It sort of reemphasizes the view that we should be worried about this and the risk is oil prices are going to get higher from here rather than coming down.”

Iran had earlier stepped up attacks on merchant ships in the Strait of Hormuz, raising the number of ships struck in the region since fighting began to at least 16. Tehran has warned the world to get ready for oil at $200 a barrel.

Throwing more uncertainty into the air, US President Donald Trump on Wednesday declared the war on Iran has been won but he will stay in the fight to finish the job.

INFLATION RISKS

US data showed the consumer price index rose 0.3 percent in February, in line with forecasts and above January’s 0.2 percent increase. The report, however, was not regarded as particularly relevant given that the Iran war has started to fuel inflation.

In bond markets, the risk of rising inflation outweighed safe-haven considerations to shove yields higher globally. Yields on 10-year Treasury notes rose 3 basis points to 4.2374 percent on Thursday, having jumped 7 bps overnight.

Fed funds futures extended their slide as investors feared higher inflation would make it harder for the Federal Reserve to ease policy. Markets are just wagering one more rate cut from the Fed this year. 

The danger of energy-driven inflation has led markets to wager the next move in rates from the European Central Bank could be up, possibly as early as June. 

Nervous investors sought the liquidity of dollars while shunning currencies from countries that are net energy importers, including Japan and much of Europe.

The euro slipped 0.2 percent to $1.1539, after closing at the weakest level since November last year. The dollar inched up 0.1 percent to 159.12 yen, the strongest level since January when reported rate checks from the US Fed spooked yen bears.

The risk-sensitive Australian dollar lost 0.4 percent to $0.7122, having hit a more than three-year high of $0.7188 on Wednesday as bets for an imminent rate hike from its central bank grew.