Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Iron ore futures rise

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SINGAPORE — Iron ore futures prices edged higher on Thursday, supported by resilient demand for the steelmaking ingredient in top consumer China, though rising shipments from leading producers Australia and Brazil capped the upward momentum.

The most-traded September iron ore contract on China’s Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) was up 0.28 percent at 728 yuan ($101.10) a metric ton.

The benchmark June iron ore on the Singapore Exchange was down 0.36 percent at $99.45 a ton.

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End-user demand remains resilient, particularly in the manufacturing sector, which continues to drive high growth in steel consumption, broker Galaxy Futures said in a note.

The capacity utilization rate of 104 electric furnaces grew 1.2 percent week-on-week to 40.4 percent, while the daily consumption of scrap steel logged a weekly increase of 3.1 percent to 245,400 tons, said consultancy Hexun Futures.

Hot metal output, typically used to gauge iron ore demand, remained high this week at 2.4477 million tons, said broker Everbright Futures.

Moreover, the total inventory of imported iron ore in 47 ports in China is 146.28 million tons, decreasing 1.74 percent week-on-week, said Hexun in a separate note.

On the supply side, the total volume of iron ore dispatched from mining firms in Australia and Brazil jumped 11.7 percent week-on-week to 27.1 million tons, said consultancy Mysteel.

Other steelmaking ingredients on the DCE dipped, with coking coal and coke both down around 0.5 percent.

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