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Iron ore heads for weekly loss as seasonally weak demand weighs

Iron ore futures rates were rangebound on Friday but were set for a weekly loss, pressured by the seasonally slowing need in leading customer China too as concerns over need prospects in 2025.

The most-traded May iron ore agreement on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) ended early morning trade 0.06%. greater at 775.5 yuan ($ 106.25) a metric ton, posturing a weekly. drop of 2.9% so far.

The benchmark January iron ore on the Singapore. Exchange lost 0.5% to $101.3 a heap, since 0452 GMT. It has. fallen 2.5% up until now today.

The ongoing decline in hot metal output, which is. usually used to evaluate iron ore demand, put rates of the secret. steelmaking ingredient under pressure, said experts.

Average day-to-day hot metal output slid for a fifth straight. week, data from consultancy Mysteel revealed. Output fell by 1.3%. week-on-week to its least expensive level given that early October at 2.29. million tons in the week to Dec. 20, per information.

However, that was 1.2% higher than the very same duration in. 2023, Mysteel information showed, recommending demand was resilient,. restricting the decrease in prices.

Furthermore, the signal that the U.S. Federal Reserve will. slow down rate cuts in 2025 supported the dollar, weighing on. the greenback-priced commodities.

Other steelmaking active ingredients on the DCE advanced, with. coking coal and coke up 1.21% and 1.57%,. respectively.

Steel standards on the Shanghai Futures Exchange were. blended. Rebar nudged up 0.09%, stainless steel. included 0.19% while hot-rolled coil edged down 0.06%,. and wire rod moved 3.38%.

China's steel demand is anticipated to fall 1.5% in 2025 and. drop 4.4% in 2024 from the year before, the state-backed China. Metallurgical Market Preparation and Research Study Institute

(source: Reuters)