(Bloomberg) -- The world’s biggest miners, having cashed in on China’s once-rampant demand for iron ore, are starting to reel from the impact of their main customer’s economic struggles.
An Aboriginal group is seeking A$1.8 billion ($1.1 billion) from Western Australia in compensation after the state government ...
Brazilian miner Vale said on Friday it expects to raise iron ore production in its main complex Carajas, in northern Brazil, ...
SYDNEY: The top global iron ore miners are headed for their weakest earnings in five years as a struggling Chinese property ...
It has been a wobbly couple of years for the Australian economy as our biggest export — of crucial importance to our ...
Mining billionaire Robert Friedland’s latest venture, iron ore producer Ivanhoe Atlantic Inc., is seeking to raise as much as ...
Investors are preparing for a new era of slumping profits and hefty dividend cuts by the world’s largest miners as iron ore markets brace for a flood of supply to trigger a collapse in prices.
Iron ore futures fell on Monday as the latest tariff threat from US President Donald Trump triggered broad risk-off sentiment ...
Rio Tinto Group — one of the world’s top two iron ... Hancock found vast fortunes of iron ore in the region. The discoveries eventually generated a new age of billionaires in Australia ...
The state is then expected to try and recoup losses by suing Fortescue, the world's fourth biggest miner of iron ore. "Fortescue accepts that the Yindjibarndi People are entitled to compensation ...
Results that may be inaccessible to you are currently showing.
Hide inaccessible results