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Iron ore nears two-week high on stimulus bets, post-holiday restocking

Iron ore futures prices gotten on Monday to their greatest in almost two weeks, buoyed by hopes of potential steps to boost the weak steel market in top customer China and expectations of a wave of postholiday restocking from the nation's steelmakers.

The most-traded September iron ore agreement on China's. Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) ended daytime trade. 3.19% greater at 791.5 yuan ($ 109.42) a metric load, the greatest. considering that Mar. 26.

The benchmark May iron ore on the Singapore. Exchange climbed up 6.15% to $104.4 a ton, since 0718 GMT, also the. highest given that Mar. 26.

The Singapore standard had stopped by 1% throughout April 4-5. trade when Chinese markets were closed for a public holiday. after Beijing said last Wednesday that it would continue to. manage unrefined steel output in 2024.

The boost in hot metal output ahead of the general public. holiday revealed that some steelmakers are in the middle of. resuming production, analysts initially Futures stated in a note.

Typical day-to-day hot metal output amongst Chinese steelmakers. surveyed climbed by 1% from the previous session to about 2.24. million tons, as of April 3, the highest given that late-February,. information from consultancy Mysteel showed.

But it deserves keeping track of whether the need recovery could. sustain as steel stocks stayed high, they added.

Other steelmaking components on the DCE gave up some. earlier losses, with coking coal up 0.57% while coke. edged down 0.35%.

Steel criteria on the Shanghai Futures Exchange were. greater.

Rebar got 1.45%, stainless-steel increased. 1.97%, hot-rolled coil included 0.98%, while wire rod. edged 0.16% greater.

Home woes in China, the world's second-largest economy,. still loomed over the ferrous market.

Chinese property developer Shimao Group said on. Monday that China Building Bank

(source: Reuters)