Wood Mackenzie vice chair Julian Kettle says if 2021 was a rebound year for metals and mining (M&M) commodities, then 2022 is shaping as the year of rebalance.

“The most likely outcome is an environment where commodity prices can settle from the extraordinary highs of 2021,” he said.

Kettle says much of the evidence points to a year of lower demand growth, and that Government stimulus could wane, while fiscal and monetary policy will tighten.

This year supply chains should refill and start to better meet the needs of consumers.

But WoodMac says there is plenty of uncertainty and that the demand risks from new variants may be “usurped by supply and logistics impacts, as workers isolate or refuse to vaccinate.”

Stimulus could be prolonged too, as governments, and central banks, worry more about the impact on growth than the looming inflation risk.

And then there’s China’s economy-versus-emissions dilemma will be critical to M&M markets.

Here are the four factors that will influence metals markets this year:

 

#1 Supply: Mine investment is muted despite 2021 earnings boom 

 Mine supply shortages and logistics constraints will remain a feature across M&M markets in 2022.

“Supply will improve, but we do not expect a meaningful investment spike this year, despite the reinvigorated balance sheets of M&M companies,” WoodMac VP Robin Griffin said.

“An obvious question is where will the record earnings of 2021 be directed?

“We know that the diversification trend from fossil fuels to future facing commodities will continue, but there has been a dearth of capital allocated to organic growth from diversified miners.”

 

#2 A ‘plethora’ net zero plans for miners good for batteries, solar, hydrogen … and recycling

With COP26 fresh in the memory, and COP27 already looming, WoodMac says miners can expect mounting pressure to meaningfully align with a 1.5-degree warming scenario.

Calls for comprehensive net zero plans, and more sophisticated disclosure, will increase this year as investors seek to rank assets on ESG metrics.

Kettle says that miners and consumers will focus on decarbonisation options that make the most economic sense.

“Expect a plethora of new renewable PPAs and captive solar and storage plans this year at production sites,” he said.

“Mine haulage will get plenty of attention too with Komatsu’s 930E hydrogen fuel-cell haul truck trial at Anglo’s Mogalakwena platinum mine worth watching.

“But also look for more traction on battery, gas, bio- and green-diesel haulage options.”

He also reckons that urban mining – recycling and scrap use – will be front of mind for consumers, both as a low cost decarbonisation option in ferrous markets and a potential solution to looming supply deficits elsewhere.

Oh, and to expect “plenty of noise from the nascent battery recycling sector”.

WoodMac net zero plans

#3 Costs: Inflation to eat into miners margins

Cost inflation is expected to continue to affect most miners and smelter-refiners this year.

Wood Mackenzie’s 2022 mine estimates include modest cost rises in 2022 but the risk is to the upside.

Labour, fuel and electricity costs remain elevated as supply struggles, and mine labour costs could gather momentum due to a combination of lockdowns, sickness and worker movement restrictions that are exacerbated by vaccine mandates.

Plus, attracting and retaining skilled mine labour is difficult, particularly in coal markets, and especially where competition from miners of battery raw materials or base metals is high.

“The cost increases, combined with revenue falls, will accelerate the decline of margins in 2022,” WoodMac said.

“Average annual margins will stay close to 2021 highs, but by year end the current record profits will have fallen to below pre-pandemic levels for most commodities.”

 

China: Underpinning and undermining commodity markets 

 Then there’s China, which will dominate market outcomes across M&M commodities, particularly with its decisions around geopolitics, pollution control and energy consumption.

“We see little chance of an end to current bans on Australian coal imports this year, and major improvements in global bilateral relations are probably too much to ask,” Griffin said.

“Prices for energy commodities in China will remain higher-than-necessary, with implications for energy prices that in turn affect producers and consumers of M&M products.”

Basically, China’s approach to decarbonisation and pollution targets will drive uncertainty and volatility.

Summary closures of energy intensive industries in order to meet emissions targets have been the modus operandi under China’s ‘dual-control’ regime and while the 2021 closures were bad for steel raw materials and alloys demand, complementary pollution controls saw mined output more than offset demand losses.

Meanwhile, base metals markets saw power-hungry smelter production plummet overnight, creating global supply shortages.

“Expect more interventions in 2022, although with broadened carve-outs to limit the kind of wild price swings seen last year,” WoodMac says.