Latest News

Iron ore production in China is recovering.

Iron ore production in China is recovering.

The iron ore futures price rebounded Tuesday due to a rebound in Chinese concentrate production following weeks of declines. Meanwhile, gains in steel benchmarks were a reflection of improving sentiment, despite weak housing statistics.

As of 0244 GMT, the most-traded contract for January iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was trading 0.82% higher. It was 803.5 yuan (about $112.88) per metric ton.

The benchmark iron ore for September on the Singapore Exchange rose 0.24% to $105.75 per ton.

Chinese consulting firm Mysteel said that after weeks of decline, the production of iron ore by Chinese mining companies recovered last week. This is a sign of domestic miners gradually recovering their operations.

China's crude output of steel in August fell for a third month in a row after steelmakers at Tangshan, China’s largest steelmaking hub, curtailed operations to prepare for upcoming military parades. Meanwhile, raw steel production in Brazil dropped 4.6% on an annual basis in August.

As the property market continues to be weak, China's new homes prices dropped 0.3% month-on-month in August.

On Thursday, the China Iron and Steel Association (a state-backed organization) will host a meeting for the heads of the iron ore purchasing at steelmakers.

Coking coal and coke both increased by 5.42% and 4.03 % respectively.

China's coal production fell by 3% in August compared to the same month last year, as production restrictions continued to be a drag.

Mysteel, in a separate report, said that the capacity utilisation rate at coking coal mining was still up by 6.9 percentage points, to an average of 82.7%, and daily raw coal production increased by 9.1% from week-to-week.

All steel benchmarks at the Shanghai Futures Exchange gained ground. Rebar increased by 1.41%. Hot-rolled coils grew by 1.34%. Wire rod rose by 0.52%. Stainless steel gained 0.19%. ($1 = 7.1184 Chinese yuan). (Reporting and editing by Rashmi Liew)

(source: Reuters)