Tuesday, July 8, 2025

Iron ore futures rise

SINGAPORE — Prices of Dalian iron ore futures rose on Friday, but held nearly flat for the week as investors weighed resilient demand for the steelmaking ingredient in top consumer China against a persistent slump in the country’s property market.

The most-traded September iron ore contract on China’s Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) ended daytime trade 0.93 percent higher at 703 yuan ($97.85) a metric ton, and dipped 0.07 percent for the week.

The benchmark July iron ore on the Singapore Exchange traded 0.94 percent higher at $93.55 a ton.

The contract eased 0.65 percent this week.

The operating rate of blast furnaces in China edged higher in the week ended June 20 to reach 83.82 percent, up some 0.4 percent from the previous week, according to data from consultancy Mysteel.

Mysteel data also showed how hot metal output, a gauge of iron ore demand, inched up 0.24 percent week-on-week to 2.422 million tons, as of June 20.

“While demand is resilient now, the market’s main focus is whether off-season demand will continue to be priced into market trading,” said broker Galaxy Futures.

Spring is typically the peak season for construction in China ahead of the rainy season from June.

“Meaningful growth in steel and iron ore demand is unlikely until new construction activity lifts,” said ANZ analysts.

Author

- Advertisement -
Previous article
Next article

Share post: