China-Brazil News: Weekend headlines
Brazil’s Vale Assures China No Retaliation For Huge Ship Ban - Manila Bulletin

Presidents Dilma Rousseff and Hu Jintao in China in 2011 as they celebrate rising two-way trade. (Photo: Roberto Stuckert Filho/PR)
HONG KONG (Reuters) – The world’s top iron ore exporter, Brazil’s Vale, is not excluding Chinese shipowners from transporting its iron ore and remains open to selling its huge dry bulk carriers to them, industry officials said.
A senior Vale official met the China Shipowners’ Association on Friday to smooth relations after Chinese industry officials said the miner stopped hiring vessels from some firms in retaliation for Beijing’s ban on its ships.
Chinese shipowners convinced Beijing in January to block the world’s biggest dry bulk ships from entering Vale’s top market due to concerns over safety and the vessels’ potential impact on loss-making domestic shipping companies.
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China Construction Bank Acquires WestLB’s Brazil Assets-Report - WSJ
SAO PAULO (Dow Jones)–China Construction Bank Corp. (CICHY, 0939.HK, 601939.SH), one of China’s biggest banks, acquired the Brazilian assets of German bank WestLB AG for an undisclosed amount, local newspaper Valor Economico reported Friday.
The Brazilian investment bank BTG Pactual advised China Construction Bank on the deal, according to the newspaper, which didn’t disclose its sources.
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Brazil’s Vale Loses to Australia as Mine Laws Curb Market Share - Bloomberg Business Week
Vale SA (VALE5), the world’s largest iron-ore producer, is poised to lose market share to Australian rivals Rio Tinto Group (RIO) and BHP Billiton Ltd (BHP) as Brazil imposes stricter environmental rules on new mining projects and labor costs soar.
Brazil’s share of the seaborne iron-ore market may sink to 27 percent by 2016, down from 31 percent now, as the country boosts capacity by 188 million tons, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Australia will probably add about 502 million tons, taking its market share to 50 percent from 41 percent.
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China buyers of Brazilian Iron Ore defer raw material cargos - FT
Vale SA (VALE5), the world’s largest iron-ore producer, is poised to lose market share to Australian rivals Rio Tinto Group (RIO) and BHP Billiton Ltd (BHP) as Brazil imposes stricter environmental rules on new mining projects and labor costs soar.
Brazil’s share of the seaborne iron-ore market may sink to 27 percent by 2016, down from 31 percent now, as the country boosts capacity by 188 million tons, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. Australia will probably add about 502 million tons, taking its market share to 50 percent from 41 percent.
Click here to access the full article direct from the FT




