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Iron ore prices drop as inventories increase, and concerns about disruptions in Australian supply ease

Dalian iron-ore futures fell for a sixth session on Monday, as China's inventories rose amid low demand, and Australia’s main?iron-ore hub resumed operations following a cyclone warning. The most-traded contract for May iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange traded 0.46% less at 761.5 Yuan ($109.89). As of 0705 GMT, the benchmark March iron ore contract on Singapore Exchange was up 0.57% at $99.6 per ton.

Singapore's benchmark dropped below $100 per ton, as China's demand slowed in the lead-up to Lunar New Year. Data from Steelhome, released on February 6, showed that iron?ore inventories at major Chinese port rose by 0.58%. Portside stocks have been building as the industry enters its seasonal shutdown period. Port Hedland in Western Australia, the world's biggest iron ore hub, resumed its operations at noon on Sunday after being shut down on Friday due to tropical cyclone Mitchell off the coasts of the resource rich Pilbara region.

ANZ Research released a report on Monday stating that this is the first major cyclone disruption in Pilbara for 2018. This follows a particularly active cyclone period between 2024 and 2025.

Pilbara Ports stated on its website that while the Port of Port Hedland is now open, Ashburton and Cape Preston West remain closed. An alert will be issued when it is safe for them to reopen.

Six cities in China's main steelmaking region, Hebei, issued air pollution alerts on February 8, causing concern about the?production cutbacks that will further dampen demand for feedstock. Coking coal and coke, two other steelmaking ingredients, also remained stagnant on the DCE. The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange have lost ground. Rebar fell 0.84%. Hot-rolled coils softened 0.55%. Stainless steel declined 0.74%. Wire rod dropped 0.89%.

(source: Reuters)