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Iron ore prices rise despite Trump's tariff threats

Iron ore prices rose on Tuesday due to a resilient short-term demand from China, the world's largest consumer. However, caution caused by President Donald Trump’s threat of increased tariffs limited gains.

As of 0244 GMT, the most traded September iron ore contract at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange added 0.14%. It now stands at 733 yuan per metric ton.

As of 0234 GMT, the benchmark August iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange was up 0.55% at $95.75 per ton.

The near-term demand for iron ore was stable, as shown by the relatively high output of hot metal, which is a measure of iron ore consumption, and underpins the prices of this key ingredient in steelmaking.

The fall in portside iron ore inventories, which fell 0.4% compared to the previous week and reached 144.04 millions tons by July 7, according to data from Mysteel consultancy.

The resumption of trade tensions around the world has limited price gains.

Trump began Monday telling his trade partners, from major suppliers like Japan and South Korea down to minor ones, that the U.S. will be imposing sharply higher tariffs on August 1. This marks a new phase of the trade war Trump launched earlier this summer.

Coking coal and coke were both up by 0.54%, but other steelmaking ingredients did not change much.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange have been moving sideways. Rebar fell 0.13%, while hot-rolled coils were down 0.06%. Wire rod remained flat, and stainless steel was up 0.63%.

The (steel market) focus has returned to the seasonally weak fundamentals, after the frenzy over promises of crackdowns on price wars receded," Zhuo Guqiu said. Analyst at Jinrui Futures.

The downside is likely to be limited, as supply and demand are not in conflict at the moment. (Reporting and editing by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson, and Rashmi aich).

(source: Reuters)