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Iron ore prices fall on concerns about demand and inventory.

Iron ore prices fall on concerns about demand and inventory.

Iron ore futures lost their gains on Monday due to rising inventories and concerns about looming demand sparked by recent market talk of production controls in the north region of China, the top consumer.

The January contract for iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange closed the daytime trading 0.64% lower, at 772 Yuan ($107.52) per metric ton. This is the lowest price since July 16.

Iron ore benchmark for September on the Singapore Exchange fell 0.25% at $101.65 per ton as of 0715 GMT, after having touched its lowest level since August 4, $101.

Portside inventories increased as a result of the pressure on prices Steelhome reported that the weekly steel production increased by 0.7% to 131.05 millions tons on August 15th, the highest level since July 25.

Steelmakers in the key Chinese steel hub Tangshan reportedly received verbal instructions to reduce output between August 31 and September 3, which is the day of the military parade celebrating the end of World War Two. This was to improve the air quality in Beijing.

The authenticity of the production restrictions could not be verified.

The morning trade saw prices rise amid firmer demand for the near-term. Data from Mysteel revealed that the average daily output of hot metal, which is a measure of ore consumption, increased by 0.1% on a week-to-week basis to 2,41 million tons as of August 14.

Market participants downplayed the potential impact of additional steel tariffs announced by U.S. president Donald Trump in the coming week.

Analysts at ANZ said that they expect China's Steel Industry to be relatively unaffected by ongoing trade tensions between the U.S. and Europe, while trade to Asia and Europe will pick up the slack.

Coke and coking coal, both steelmaking ingredients that are also used to make coke and coking coal, have eased by 2.94% and respectively.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange have lost ground. Rebar fell by 0.88%; wire rod dropped by 1.26%; hot-rolled coils were down 0.2%, and stainless steel remained unchanged. $1 = 7.1799 Chinese Yuan Renminbi (Reporting and editing by Sherry Jackson, Harikrishnan Nair and Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)