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BHP sends iron ore from Jimblebar to Malaysia and Vietnam after China ban stops sales

BHP Group shipped iron ore to Malaysia and Vietnam that was barred from sale in China. The company is seeking other buyers for its Jimblebar stocks, which are piling up at Chinese port amid a long-running contract dispute with Beijing. China Mineral Resources Group, set up in the year 2022 with the aim of centralising iron ore purchases and gaining better terms from miner, banned Chinese steel mills from purchasing BHP's Jimblebar Blend Fines, a medium-grade ore. This was done last September, during ongoing talks about a new contract. While talks continue, Lowlands Blue docked on Malaysia's shores on January 14 with 95,000 metric tonnes of BHP's Jimblebar Blend Fines (JMBF). This was the first time that a ship carrying this cargo had been discharged since Kpler began keeping records in 2019. Cape Yamabuki, meanwhile, shipped approximately 75,000 tons JMBF to Vietnam last December, according Kpler data, and two traders who are familiar with the situation. Kpler data revealed that this was the first cargo shipped to Vietnam in at least 2024.

BHP DIVERSIFIES ORE BUYERS?

The BHP mining company has been trying to diversify their buyers in order to offset its China problems. The world's no. The world's No. It refused to comment on reported shipments. Two traders claim that BHP's Jimblebar Fines were 360% higher than they were in late September, reaching 8.1 million tonnes as of January 13th. Sources say that Chinese steelmakers cannot take delivery of JMBF cargoes which are already in?ports. According to Kpler data, the daily global exports for JMBF have dropped 74% since January 2025. BHP has been offering greater discounts on its iron ore, including Jimblebar fines, to "try to facilitate" sales in China. Two traders said that the discounts on BHP's Newman Fines, a medium-grade type of iron ore, have widened from $2.48 to $4.73 per ton compared to the benchmark 61% indices of Argus & Mysteel.

According to a trader who was familiar with the deal, the Vietnamese steel mill placed the order because of the deep discount.

All sources requested anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the subject. Reporting by Staff; Editing by Kevin Liffey

(source: Reuters)