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Coal ETFs hit by falling natural gas prices

Coal ETFs hit by falling natural gas prices

Write: Nicky [2011-05-20]
The drop-off in natural gas prices is touching other areas, mostly notably coal exchange traded funds (ETFs).

Natural gas and gas prices are down, causing coal and iron ore prices to slump alongside them. It s simple economics: once natural gas because cheap enough to use heavily, it makes coal a lot less appealing for power plants, reports Mark Peters for The Wall Street Journal.

As long as natural gas is cheap, this trend could continue. Coal prices may not have much further to fall before declining production and falling stockpiles begin to prop up the market.

Javier Blas and Jack Frachy for The Financial Times reports that lower steel production will also affect the commodity market. The price of steelmaking commodities iron ore and coking coal are forecast to drop next quarter for the first time in a year, because of waning interest in steel.

Mining executives and analysts estimate that iron ore prices for the fourth quarter will drop by 10-15% and coking coal prices by 5-10%.