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Iron ore prices rise on China's demand, but fears of a trade war curb gains

Iron ore prices rise on China's demand, but fears of a trade war curb gains

Iron ore prices rose on Tuesday due to a growing demand in China, the world's largest steel-making consumer. However, trade war fears and upcoming U.S. Tariffs limited the gains.

As of 0240 GMT, the most traded May iron ore contract at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was up 0.39% to 780.5 Yuan ($107.47).

On the Singapore Exchange, the benchmark May ore was trading at $101.5 per ton. This is a 0.51% increase.

Chinese consultancy Mysteel said that a further increase in hot metal production at Chinese steelmakers helped to support the price of iron ore imported last week.

Everbright Futures, a broker, reported that hot metal production continued to rise in March by 10,200 tonnes to 2,3728 million tones month-on-month. The daily consumption of ore imported also increased by 13,200 tones.

Iron ore demand is usually gauged by the hot metal production.

Mysteel said that the recovery of downstream demand will determine whether ore prices can remain strong.

A private sector survey revealed on Tuesday that China's factory output expanded at the fastest rate in four months during March. This was boosted by stronger export orders and a higher level of demand.

Chinese stocks fell despite this on Monday, as concerns about a trade war heightened and weighed on sentiment.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said on Sunday that he will announce reciprocal tariffs this week for all nations and not just 10 or 15 countries with large trade imbalances.

Trump has promised that he will unveil a massive tariff policy on April 2.

Coking coal and coke, the other steelmaking ingredients traded in a mixed manner on the DCE.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange has seen a decline in most steel benchmarks. Rebar fell 0.44%. Hot-rolled coils slipped 0.15%. Wire rod fell 0.5%. Stainless steel rose 0.6%.

(source: Reuters)