SYDNEY (Reuters) - Global miner BHP Billiton (>> BHP Billiton Limited) on Tuesday batted away suggestions of a turnaround in iron ore prices anytime soon - a bad omen for smaller producers struggling close to the break even point.

Chief Executive Andrew Mackenzie, releasing BHP's half-year results, said iron ore demand in the all-important Chinese market was flat, although imports have increased by displacing higher-cost domestic supply.

But as supply costs have fallen, the price - around $62 a tonne - is now "more reflective of the medium-term fundamentals", he said. [ID:nL4N0VT3GF]

That's a hefty enough price to keep BHP, the world's third-biggest iron ore miner, and fellow mega-producers Vale (>> Vale SA) and Rio Tinto (>> Rio Tinto Limited) (>> Rio Tinto plc) in the black but is borderline for smaller rivals.

Atlas Iron (>> Atlas Iron Limited), which plans output of about 14 million tonnes in fiscal 2015 against BHP's 245 million tonnes, posted an underlying net loss of A$139 million ($108 million) for the half-year, against a A$61 million profit a year earlier.

Managing Director Ken Brinsden said the company would be "unrelenting" in its focus on cost reduction and forecast its all-in cost for producing iron ore would fall around 9 percent to A$60-A$63 per tonne in the six months to June 30.

This is just above the A$66.82 Atlas received for its iron ore in the six months to end-December, more than 40 percent less than a year earlier.

Another Australian "junior", BC Iron (>> BC Iron Limited), also said it slipped into the red on Tuesday with an underlying net loss of A$18.4 million, while both took hefty writedowns relating to the value of their mines.

"The metrics look pretty dismal at the moment due to the state of the iron ore market," Morgans Financial mining analyst James Wilson said.

"Since there is no real consensus on where the iron ore price is heading, they are treading in no man's land."

Atlas Iron's Brinsden said the miner - which has A$170 million in cash but A$329 million in debt due in December 2017 - was turning to new markets to reduce its dependence on China, and had made some small sales to India and South Korea.

While he acknowledged the market was tough, Brinsden said the tonnage being eliminated from the market worldwide would eventually help turn prices around.

"The rumours of the demise of Atlas have been greatly exaggerated," he said.

($1 = 1.2873 Australian dollars)

(Editing by Richard Pullin)

By James Regan