BEIJING- Iron ore futures jumped on Wednesday, as better-than-expected China manufacturing activity data raised prospects of a pickup in demand from the world’s top steel producer.
The most-traded May iron ore futures contract on the Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) was 1.97 percent higher at 904.5 yuan ($130.62) a ton, after closing about 0.8 percent lower in the previous session.
On the Singapore Exchange, the benchmark March iron ore was up 1.18 percent at $125.55 a ton, extending gains.
China’s manufacturing purchasing managers’ index (PMI)climbed to 52.6 last month, the highest reading since April 2012, up from 50.1 in the previous month.
“We believe the better-than-expected data has injected some confidence into the market.
Also, the expectation of continued improvement in downstream (steel) demand lent support to the prices of raw materials including iron ore,” said Yu Chen, a Shanghai-based senior iron ore analyst at consultancy Mysteel.
Chinese steel mills are expected to replenish iron ore inventories to meet production needs after some mills resumed production, analysts from Huatai Futures said in a note, adding that the hot metal output had improved steadily.
Coking coal and coke, also steelmaking ingredients, showed signs of strength. Coking coal rose 0.59 percent, while coke grew 1.93 percent. – Reuters