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Dalian iron ore's rally of three days is broken by stronger supply outlook

Dalian iron ore's rally of three days is broken by stronger supply outlook

Iron ore futures dropped on Thursday, ending a three-day gain, due to a better supply outlook from increased shipments. However, seasonal demand for this key ingredient in steelmaking limited the decline.

The September contract for iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange closed 0.28% down at 720.5 Yuan ($98.76).

As of 0703 GMT, the benchmark May iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange dropped by 0.99% to $99,25 per ton.

Hexun Futures, the broker, reported that shipments to China increased by 178,000 tonnes this week and that port inventories increased slightly on Monday. Mysteel, a consultancy, reported that the volume of iron ore exported to China by Port Hedland - Western Australia's top iron ore port - increased 30.3% in March following a decline in February.

Despite the increase in steel production, improved ore prices supported some of the price increases. ANZ noted that "improved profitability at steel mills saw production recover to 93 millions tons in March. This kept Q1 production growth positive."

Lange Steel, citing data from the China Iron and Steel Industry Association, reported that in mid-April the daily average production of steel by key steel companies was 2,113 million tons, an increase of 3.3% on a month-to-month basis. China's equities were largely in decline on Thursday, as Washington indicated a willingness for tariffs to be lowered against China but rejected unilateral actions. U.S. Treasury secretary Scott Bessent stated on Wednesday that the high tariffs between Washington, D.C. and Beijing were not sustainable. The Trump administration was open to de-escalating a trade conflict between Washington, Beijing.

Bessent said that Trump would not take this unilaterally. Coking coal and coke, two other steelmaking ingredients, gained on the DCE. They rose by 0.84% each and 1.56% respectively. The Shanghai Futures Exchange saw a decline in most steel benchmarks. Wire rod and hot-rolled colum both fell around 0.1%. Stainless steel, however, rose 0.12%.

(source: Reuters)