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Iron ore futures drop on weak China data but are set to gain quarterly

Iron ore futures fell on Tuesday due to weak China manufacturing data. However, they are on track for a solid quarter gain as export-driven rallies from July and August have outweighed recent declines.

As of 0238 GMT, the most traded January iron ore contract at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was down by 0.45% to 782 yuan (109.73 dollars) per metric ton.

The contract is down 0.51% this month but up 9.82% for the quarter.

On the Singapore Exchange, September benchmark iron ore was down 0.05% at $105.25 per ton. The contract is up 12.27% in the first quarter.

According to an official survey conducted in September, China's manufacturing sector contracted six consecutive months, indicating that manufacturers are waiting for additional stimulus to boost domestic consumption.

Exports have increased for the first since March. This has eased some of the concerns about the recent decline.

Citi analysts noted earlier in the month that exports may not continue to perform better than expected as steel margins are under pressure.

RatingDog's private sector survey showed that China’s factory activity expanded in September at the fastest pace since March. New orders drove faster production growth.

Goldman Sachs analysts said that the improvement in profitability of raw materials such as steel is a sign of government anti-involution policy at work.

Coking coal and coke, which are both steelmaking ingredients, have also lost ground. They fell by 1.45% and 0.78 %, respectively.

The benchmark steel prices on the Shanghai Futures Exchange fell. Steel benchmarks on the Shanghai Futures Exchange declined.

According to Mysteel, billet production rose in the Chinese steelmaking hub Tangshan during September 22-28 even as profits steelmakers could earn through billet sales decreased. ($1 = 7.1263 Chinese yuan) (Reporting by Lucas Liew; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)

(source: Reuters)