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Dalian iron ore continues to hurt Chinese steel export prospects

Dalian iron ore continues to hurt Chinese steel export prospects

The price of iron ore futures fell for the third session in a row on Wednesday. This was due to a gloomy outlook for Chinese exports, and increased trade tensions between China and the U.S.

The May contract for the most traded iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange closed at 812 Yuan ($111.86), a decrease of 0.98%.

In the early part of the session, the contract reached 803 yuan, its lowest since February 18.

As of 0708 GMT, the benchmark March iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange was down 0.22% at $105.8 per ton.

Last week, U.S. president Donald Trump signed a memo aimed at tightening restrictions on Chinese investments in strategic areas. This caused Chinese stocks to plummet on Tuesday.

In a report, Hexun Futures, a Chinese consultancy, stated that the additional levies by Vietnam and South Korea will affect China's direct exports of steel, which in turn, will put pressure on prices.

Last week, Vietnam announced that it would impose a temporary antidumping levy against some steel products imported from China. Meanwhile, South Korea has imposed tariffs provisionally on Chinese steel plates imports.

Hexun added that the steel mills are now in full production and demand for raw materials is increasing.

According to Chinese consultancy Lange Steel citing statistics by the China Iron and Steel Industry Association, in China, daily crude production at key steel companies increased 0.8% on a month-to-month basis to 2,151 million tonnes, while average daily steel production rose 4.2% to 2.037 millions tons.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange saw a rise in most steel benchmarks. Rebar rose by 1.24%; hot-rolled coils increased by 1.18%; wire rod rose by 0.57%. Stainless steel fell 0.3%.

Citi analysts wrote in a recent note that "China's expectations of a second round of government-mandated capacity reductions have been increasing in the past few months."

Coking coal and coke, which are both steelmaking ingredients, showed marginal losses. They were down by 0.55% each.

(source: Reuters)