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The price of iron ore continues to rise on the back of rising expectations for improved demand in China

Iron ore prices rose for a second consecutive session on Tuesday. This was fueled by the growing expectation that demand for this key ingredient in steelmaking will improve in China, the world's largest consumer.

After a more than 3% rise on Monday, the most-traded September ore at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange finished morning trade 4.6% higher.

At 0350 GMT the benchmark May iron ore price on the Singapore Exchange had risen by over 6%.

Analysts at Huatai Futures wrote in a note that the overall macro expectations have improved somewhat after the announcements of policies on controlling crude steel and trading old appliances for new in certain regions.

China announced late on Wednesday that it will continue to manage the crude steel production this year.

Huatai Futures said that "steel margins are improving, which could encourage steelmakers resume production later and generate more ore needs." They cited high portside ore stockpiles and higher-than usual shipments as potential headwinds.

Analysts also expect that some steelmakers will ramp up production in order to generate cash flow, before they are required to reduce production later this year.

Chinese steelmakers' frantic post-holiday stocking also lifted the mood.

Data from the consultancy Mysteel revealed that iron ore transactions at major Chinese ports increased to 1.63 millions tons on Monday, up from 305,000 tonnes on Sunday.

Iron ore's obvious cost-competitiveness against steel scrap has increased its appeal as steelmaking feedstocks, as margins remain thin despite some improvements.

Coking coal and coke, which are both steelmaking ingredients, also saw gains on the DCE. They were up by 1.85% and 1.35 %, respectively.

Steel benchmarks at the Shanghai Futures Exchange are mostly up.

Rebar grew 1.65%. Hot-rolled coil climbed 1.43%. Wire rod grew 0.64%. Stainless steel jumped 0.55%. ($1 = 7.2342 Chinese Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Cassandra Yap, Amy Lv)

(source: Reuters)