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Dalian iron ore to gain for the first time in four months on strong near-term demand

Dalian iron ore prices rose on Monday, and they were expected to record their first monthly gain in four months due to strong near-term demand from top consumer China. However, a prolonged property crisis held back gains.

The September contract for iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange ended the morning trading 0.21% higher, at 715.5 Yuan ($99.87).

The contract has gained 1.71 % so far in June.

As of 0346 GMT the benchmark July iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange was down 0.16% at $94.4 per ton. This is a drop of 1.3% for this month.

According to Mysteel, hot metal production, which is a measure of iron ore consumption, was stable at 2.42 million tonnes as of 27th June.

In a separate report, Mysteel stated that the average rate of blast furnace capacity utilization rose by 0.04 percentage points, reaching 90.83% for the period from June 20 to 26.

A survey found that manufacturing activity in China fell for the third consecutive month in June.

Analysts say that a weak domestic demand, combined with a long-lasting property crisis, causes factory owners in China to hold onto their inventory while they wait for Beijing to strike deals to ease tensions between the U.S.

Investors expected rate cuts following comments by Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell last week, who said that rate cuts would be likely if tariffs did not cause inflation to spike.

Dollar-denominated investments are cheaper for holders of currencies other than the greenback.

Coking coal and coke, which are used to make steel, also rose, by 1.14% and 0.8%, respectively.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange steel benchmarks have mostly increased. Rebar gained 0.43%; hot-rolled coil gained 0.22%; stainless steel gained 0.488%; and wire rod fell 0.21%.

(source: Reuters)