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Singapore iron ore falls below $100/t, talks of production curbs weigh

Iron ore futures costs extended losses into a 3rd straight session on Thursday, with the Singapore standard falling below the essential mental level of $100 a metric heap, weighed down by resumed talks of steel output curbs in leading consumer China.

The benchmark September iron ore on the Singapore Exchange slid 1.18% to $99.75 a load, since 0243 GMT, its most affordable since July 31.

The most-traded January iron ore contract on China's Dalian Product Exchange (DCE) slipped 2.38% to 739 yuan ($ 102.99) a load, touching the lowest level given that April 1.

Market talk that China's top steelmaking hub Tangshan will enforce rigid constraints on steel output soured belief, pressing ore costs, stated experts.

The Advancement and Reform Commission and the bureau of the Market and Infotech in Tangshan did not respond to Reuters' requests for comment.

Beijing has made it clear that it would continue handling crude steel output this year but has yet to disclose any vital details relating to timing and scale.

The indications of weakening in the steel market including suppressed domestic need, slowing exports, expanding losses amongst steelmakers dented cravings for raw materials, weighing down their prices, stated Zhuo Guiqiu, an expert at Jinrui Futures.

Need in the coming month-the normally peak usage season-will improve, however we recommend not hold extremely high expectations.

Adding downward pressure to the marketplace is growing supply as shown in increase in iron ore imports in July, high portside stocks and a surge in July iron ore exports from one of the major providers Brazil.

Other steelmaking active ingredients on the DCE were mixed, with coking coal gaining 0.25% while coke dipped 0.4%.

Steel standards on the Shanghai Futures Exchange published additional loss. Rebar shed 0.97%, hot-rolled coil dipped 0.92%, wire rod fell 1.47% and stainless steel edged down 0.22%.

(source: Reuters)