The 4 month rally in iron ore stocks shows no sign of abating, with some miners hitting their highest share prices in more than a year this week.
Shares in BHP Billiton and Rio Tinto were fetching their highest prices since February and March respectively, while Fortescue Metals Group has not been this valuable since May 2012.
The strong rally in the sector has come after a four-month period that was supposed to be its weakest of 2013, yet saw the benchmark iron ore price refuse to slip below USD 130 per tonne.
A further rise in the benchmark price to USD 135 per tonne over the past 48 hours fuelled further buying and pushed Fortescue shares to USD 5.53 for the first time in 18 months.
Fortescue shares have rallied so strongly since they were below AUD 3 in late June that Deutsche analyst Mr Paul Young downgraded the stock to a sell last week on the basis that it had become over valued, particularly when compared with BHP and Rio.
But the analysts at Macquarie, who are traditionally bullish about iron ore said that Fortescue looks considerably cheaper than BHP based on a price to equity ratio. Despite the 80% rally over the past four months, we continue to see value in FMG.
Fortescue has a gross debt pile of USD 12 billion, and the market has long debated whether the company will be able to service that debt over the next decade as iron ore prices gradually decline.
But Macquarie said Fortescue's recovery over recent months had been so strong that the debate was likely to shift to what the miner would do with its spare cash, rather than the debt challenge.
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