Australia's new gold rush, courtesy of China

China's insatiable demand for steel is turning Western Australia into a land of billionaires and boomtowns.

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By Brian O'Keefe, Fortune senior editor

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Hotelier Parekh flaunts gold, but it's unsexy iron ore that's fueling today's boom.
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Kalgoorlie is one of the few places where you might see a real-life crocodile dundee belly up to the bar.
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In Perth, luxury brands have arrived, windsurfing is in, Ferraris are in short supply, and house prices are zooming.
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Clive Palmer is charging Chinese investors for the right to build the infrastructure.
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Andrew Forrest is building the infrastructure all on his own.
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At the Exchange Hotel, barmaids known as "Skimpies" are part of the landscape.
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(Fortune Magazine) -- I'm wedged into a corner of the Wild West Saloon in Kalgoorlie, Australia, listening to a couple of investment bankers from Sydney discuss the tight market for Maseratis, when my new pal Ashok Parekh, the saloon's owner, interrupts.

"Hey, Fortune," he shouts over the AC/DC on the jukebox, placing a racquetball-sized piece of raw gold in my hand. "Take a look at this."

Parekh, 51, is a local kid who made good -- more precisely, a local of Pakistani descent who was born in Dublin and moved to this mineral-rich part of Western Australia as a teen. By day he runs an accounting firm that keeps the books for hundreds of private gold miners. (Thus the supersized $30,000 nugget, which he bought from a client two years ago.)

But it's his role as the proprietor of the Exchange Hotel, which houses the saloon -- he also owns the Palace Hotel and its Gold Bar across the street -- that makes him possibly the most popular man in town. He also has an awesome middle-part haircut, which looks to be modeled on that of Journey singer Steve Perry, circa 1981.

Over his shoulder I spot one of the pub's porn-star-tan, bikini-clad waitresses -- they're known in these parts as "skimpies" -- climbing up on the bar, topless but for her pasties, to perform an evocative and startlingly athletic dance routine. The other half-dozen barmaids on duty have also removed their shirts. (That means the beer pitcher they use to collect tip money must be full again.) With his eyes on the dancer, one of the bankers expresses surprise that so many highly attractive local lasses are interested in serving drinks in nothing but a G-string.

"Oh, no," says Parekh, smiling. "I flew in a dozen girls from back east. Yeah, got to have the best this week." Pausing, he gestures at the crowd: "It's all about promoting mateship."

"To mateship!" says the banker, lifting his pint.

This is not just another night in the outback. It happens to be the final evening of debauchery at Diggers & Dealers, the biggest mining conference in the Southern Hemisphere and possibly the rowdiest corporate confab anywhere. For starters, it's in Australia, where quaffing copious amounts of beer is a national pastime. But it's also in Kalgoorlie, one of the few places on this island continent where you might actually see a real-life Crocodile Dundee belly up to the bar.

The Exchange and the Palace were built during the 1890s gold rush that spawned this desert town, 350 miles inland from Perth. The conference itself started 15 years ago when the former owner of the Palace got together a couple hundred local gold prospectors who were looking for investors and hired some ladies from a local bordello to serve drinks.

That frontier mindset is still in effect. For three straight nights the moneymen from Sydney and Melbourne have been drinking -- in many cases until 5 a.m. or later -- alongside local miners in dusty work clothes. If they were at the Exchange, they even got treated to at least one fistfight that turned into an Ultimate Fighting-grade pummeling before the bouncers stepped in.

The gonzo spirit of the conference hasn't changed much over the years, but its scope and influence has. This year there are a record 1,700 attendees from all areas of the mining world. (That's the maximum that can be squeezed into the one-acre tent on a local mining college's campus that houses the bulk of the official daytime events.)

Tonight at the Exchange are a good many of the mining executives and bankers who run Australia's resource economy, scores of men and a handful of non-"skimpy" women -- swilling pints, glancing up at Aussie-rules football on the 20-odd TVs, and trading tales of 10-cent stocks that now trade at $3.

Life is so good for them at the moment that it's a wonder they're not all up dancing on the bar themselves. During the past five years the Australian stock market's benchmark index, the ASX 200, has produced a total return of 170%, reaching new highs regularly this fall. Over the same time span the ASX index of mineral stocks has doubled that performance, returning 340%.

What's driving all this is a mining boom unlike anything this natural-resources-rich country has ever seen. Prices of all kinds of metals have been skyrocketing in recent years -- in large part because of increasing demand from China.

Australia is the world's second-largest producer of gold (up 150% in price in the past five years), zinc (up 250%), and uranium (up 750%). It's the third-largest producer of nickel (which has more than tripled in price) and the fifth-largest producer of copper (which has almost quadrupled). In short, it's a good time to be digging stuff out of the ground Down Under.

The Aussies are convinced that the party won't end anytime soon either. Everyone you speak to -- from mining executives to government officials to miners themselves -- believes that the massive economic growth of China and India will drive unprecedented demand for resources over the next two decades.

If this superboom pans out, the biggest economic opportunity for Australia will probably be in mining a not-so-sexy yet economically crucial commodity: iron ore. The raw material in steel is mined and exported in far greater quantities than nickel and copper and the like. Global iron ore production reached 1.7 billion tons last year, up from one billion in 2000. Australia is the largest exporter of iron ore in the world, and China's insatiable demand for it -- to build skyscrapers, cars, and washing machines -- is growing faster than analysts can reset their estimates.

The price of iron ore has more than doubled in the past three years, to a benchmark price of $51 a ton, and is projected by analysts to rise 30% or more again next year. The country's two largest producers of the metal, Australian mining giant BHP Billiton (Charts) (with a $230 billion market capitalization) and Anglo-Australian powerhouse Rio Tinto (Charts) ($120 billion), have each pledged billions of dollars to increase production by two or three times over the next five years. (In fact, BHP is so confident about the broader boom that it initiated a takeover bid for Rio in early November.)

The iron rush is no longer confined to giants. A host of smaller companies --virtually all with soaring share prices -- are racing to cash in on what has long been BHP and Rio's exclusive turf.

Just a few years ago an independent, or "junior," iron ore miner was virtually unheard-of. Now some 50 companies have entered the iron ore business in Western Australia. Increasingly they are being financed by direct investments from Chinese companies eager to lock up new sources of supply. No less an eminence than Chinese President Hu Jintao stopped in Perth in September to tour an iron ore smelter and other facilities.

On the last day of Diggers, one of the prime beneficiaries of the euphoria flew in and took the town by storm. His name is Andrew Forrest, and he's a high-profile and controversial figure in the Australian resource world. He founded his iron ore company, Fortescue Metals Group, in 2003 and has become a billionaire several times over as his company's stock rocketed over the past year -- despite the fact that he has yet to ship an ounce of ore to his customers in China.

In front of a packed house that afternoon, he talked about Fortescue "upsetting the oligarchy" of BHP and Rio and fended off skeptical questions from the press about his ambitious infrastructure-building schedule. At the gala wrap-up dinner, he received the Dealer of the Year award in recognition of the $3 billion in financing he had secured -- mostly from U.S. and European investors. And then, inevitably, he hit the Exchange for some celebratory pints with his wife and his executive team, staying out till 1:30 a.m.? Not that Parekh was surprised. "Oh, yeah," he says. "Andrew's a good bloke."

That may be. But he's certainly a perfect example -- actually, one of several I came across Down Under -- of the potentially explosive benefits of being on the right side of a once-in-a-lifetime boom.

The following day I went to see Forrest at his office in Perth, the bustling capital of Western Australia. The coastal city combines the surfer sensibility and perfect weather of San Diego with the go-go feel of a boomtown. About two million people -- or 10% of the country's population of 20 million -- live in Western Australia, which is almost four times the size of Texas and produces about 60% of the country's exports. Perth, with about one million residents, is the only big city in this suddenly flush region.

The effects of economic expansion on the city are manifest. Luxury retailers such as Gucci and Hugo Boss have recently come to town. Sales of Lamborghinis, Ferraris, and Bentleys are spiking. Home prices have averaged a 33% annual gain over the past five years. Property expert Collier International recently declared Perth the tightest market for office space on the planet, with a vacancy rate of just 0.7%.

On the day of my visit to Fortescue's headquarters, on the second floor of the Hyatt Centre, there was a palpable sense of urgency inside -- a reflection, perhaps, of the breakneck pace at which Forrest is attempting to build what he calls the "new force in iron ore." Most of the roughly 500 employees in the office were eating lunch in their cubicles while a large digital display counted down the time remaining for the company to meet its target of "first ore on ship" in mid-May (or 234 days, 18 hours, 18 minutes, and 49 seconds after my arrival).

Despite the celebration the night before, Forrest was looking fresh. Short and ruddy-faced, with reddish curly hair, the excitable 45-year-old didn't waste any time launching into his pitch. He led me to a seven- by seven-foot map of Fortescue's holdings in the Pilbara, the 193,000-square-mile area of northwestern Australia that is the heart of the country's iron ore industry.

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Most stock quote data provided by BATS. Market indices are shown in real time, except for the DJIA, which is delayed by two minutes. All times are ET. Disclaimer. Morningstar: © 2018 Morningstar, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Factset: FactSet Research Systems Inc. 2018. All rights reserved. Chicago Mercantile Association: Certain market data is the property of Chicago Mercantile Exchange Inc. and its licensors. All rights reserved. Dow Jones: The Dow Jones branded indices are proprietary to and are calculated, distributed and marketed by DJI Opco, a subsidiary of S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC and have been licensed for use to S&P Opco, LLC and CNN. Standard & Poor's and S&P are registered trademarks of Standard & Poor's Financial Services LLC and Dow Jones is a registered trademark of Dow Jones Trademark Holdings LLC. All content of the Dow Jones branded indices © S&P Dow Jones Indices LLC 2018 and/or its affiliates.