JEast Posted June 18, 2012 Share Posted June 18, 2012 Is China Slowing? Add in the natural gas effect on US coal, and not so good for domestic railroads. http://www.platts.com/RSSFeedDetailedNews/RSSFeed/Coal/6353964 Cheers JEast Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tyska Posted June 18, 2012 Share Posted June 18, 2012 Is China Slowing? Add in the natural gas effect on US coal, and not so good for domestic railroads. http://www.platts.com/RSSFeedDetailedNews/RSSFeed/Coal/6353964 Cheers JEast From the article, I get that it is more of a dispute over price as opposed to drop in demand. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
JEast Posted June 18, 2012 Author Share Posted June 18, 2012 It is my understanding the price and demand are inter-related to supply. If the demand was high, would one argue much over price? One can debate if supply creates its own supply, which is if you have a place to store the supply. If not, the product sits in the warehouse, or on a ship in the ocean. Cheers JEast Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CONeal Posted June 18, 2012 Share Posted June 18, 2012 Of course a couple traders get greedy without locking up a supplier and it gets twisted into more then it really is. If I was China I would make them sit for as long as possible no matter how much the demand is. These are the same people that will run the price up on you later. Send a message now. One could argue that food is a scarce resouce but China send back rice all the time to the US b/c it doesn't meet a particular standard they are looking for (the rice is still good but not what China is wanting). Wouldn't be suprised if the 30 boats of coal is something other then what they use according to specs. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
tyska Posted June 18, 2012 Share Posted June 18, 2012 It is my understanding the price and demand are inter-related to supply. If the demand was high, would one argue much over price? One can debate if supply creates its own supply, which is if you have a place to store the supply. If not, the product sits in the warehouse, or on a ship in the ocean. Cheers JEast I get your point, but it appears this was coal that was brought over on speculation and is stuck now. The Chinese and others are still making contracts for coal at a lower price with suppliers, so the railroads will still be moving as lots of coal is still being used. Might slow down for a short time in a standoff, but as long as it is still being used will have to be moved at sometime. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Liberty Posted June 18, 2012 Share Posted June 18, 2012 To know what this means, I think we would need to have more information, such as 30 ships out of how many? how frequent is this situation? is it caused by a one-time event between two parties or by macro factors? etc. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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