Wednesday, September 24, 2025

Iron ore eases

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BEIJING- Iron ore futures lost ground on Friday, fully erasing gains recorded in the morning session, as softening demand and the expectation of a lack of forceful stimulus in 2024 in top consumer China weighed on sentiment.

The most-traded May iron ore on China’s Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) ended daytime trading 1.37 percent lower at 935 yuan ($131.51) a metric ton, the lowest since Dec. 7.

The benchmark January iron ore on the Singapore Exchange was little moved at $134 a ton.

Chinese leaders agreed at an annual meeting on the economy this week to run a budget deficit of 3 percent of gross domestic product in 2024, lower than this year’s revised 3.8 percent target, Reuters reported.

This suggested that Beijing is not considering a big fiscal bazooka next year.

The continuously falling ore demand, however, is also weighing on the price of the key steelmaking ingredient.

The average daily hot metal output among steel mills surveyed declined for the seventh consecutive week by 1.1 percent on the week to 2.27 million tons as of Dec. 15, data from consultancy Mysteel showed. -Reuters

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