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Dalian iron ore drops to two-week low as Beijing stimulus dissatisfies

Dalian iron ore futures rates moved to their least expensive in over two weeks on Monday as China's most current stimulus bundle underwhelmed investors throughout markets, while softer economic data and firmer supply in the top customer included pressure on costs.

The most-traded January iron ore agreement on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) ended morning trade 3% lower at 761.0 yuan ($ 105.95) a metric heap.

The contract had actually earlier toppled by as much as 3.5% to 756.0 yuan, its weakest because Oct. 25.

The benchmark December iron ore on the Singapore Exchange was 1.67% lower at $100.85 a load, as of 0341 GMT.

China revealed a 10 trillion yuan ($ 1.40 trillion) debt package on Friday to relieve city government funding stress and stabilise flagging economic development, as it faces fresh pressure from the re-election of Donald Trump as U.S. president.

The plan disappointed investors hoping China would reveal extra financial buffers to pre-empt another round of fractious Sino-U.S. tensions and trade barriers.

The financial obligation swap will not translate straight into development, said ANZ experts.

The absence of direct fiscal stimulus indicates policymakers have left room for evaluating the effect of the next U.S. administration's policies, included ANZ.

The marketplace will now shift focus to the Politburo meeting and Central Economic Work Conference in December, where we anticipate more pro-consumption countercyclical measures to be announced.

Highlighting China's sputtering economy, information on Saturday revealed consumer prices increased at the slowest pace in 4 months in October while manufacturer cost deflation deepened.

On the other hand, Chinese iron ore imports continued to surprise with volumes remaining above 100 million loads recently, the ANZ analysts said.

Other steelmaking components on the DCE dropped, with coking coal and coke down 3.32% and 4.56%,. respectively.

Steel benchmarks on the Shanghai Futures Exchange decreased. Rebar shed nearly 2.3%, hot-rolled coil and. stainless-steel lost about 1.94%, and wire rod. tumbled almost 3%.

(source: Reuters)