Thursday, April 24, 2025

Iron ore slides

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BEIJING- Iron ore prices extended declines into a second straight session on Wednesday, dragged down by expectations of seasonally falling demand in top consumer China and US tariff hikes on some Chinese products.

The most-traded September iron ore contract on China’s Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) ended morning trade 1.84 percent  lower at 855.5 yuan ($118.41) a metric ton.

The benchmark June iron ore contract on the Singapore Exchange was 1.3 percent  lower at $113.65 a ton, its lowest level since April 24.

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The decline is partially because the macro sentiment was affected after finding that the usage of latest bond issuance is not directly related to the ferrous market, analysts at Shengda Futures said in a note.

Both iron ore and steel recorded gains on Monday after sentiment was boosted by China’s finance ministry unveiling plans to issue 1 trillion yuan of long-term special government bonds.

The anticipation of seasonally lower demand is also weighing on the prices of the key steemaking ingredient.

“Hot metal output may likely hit a ceiling in the coming one to two weeks, deterring traders’ interest in stockpiling (iron ore)…the high portside ore stocks remained a drag,” analysts at Galaxy Futures said in a note.

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