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China's iron ore prices fall due to declining steel production and rising inventories

Iron ore prices weakened on Monday due to a decline in steel production in China and rising port inventories. There was also concern about a weakening of downstream demand.

By 0240 GMT, the most traded January iron ore contract at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange fell by 0.75% to $791 yuan (US$111.05) per metric ton.

The benchmark December Iron Ore at the Singapore Exchange fell 0.56% to $105.55 per ton.

According to Mysteel, the capacity utilisation rate at Chinese blast-furnace steel producers fell by 1.3 percentage point to 88.6% on average, for the fifth consecutive week between October 24-30.

Mysteel's data shows that the daily hot metal production, which is a measure of iron ore consumption, fell 1.5% from one week to another, reaching 2.36 million tonnes.

Everbright Futures, a Chinese broker, predicted that overseas supply would continue to improve in November. Shipments and arrivals are expected to increase.

Analysts from Galaxy Futures stated that while domestic steel production may improve in the fourth quarter of this year, the main issue is the rapidly declining end-user demand for iron ore.

As part of China's government pledge to reduce the overcapacity, China's steel association, which is backed by the state, announced that its steel production would drop below 1 billion tonnes in 2025.

SteelHome data shows that the total iron ore stocks across Chinese ports increased by 1.53% in a week to 135.6 million tonnes as of October 31.

Coking coal and coke, which are both steelmaking ingredients, have lost ground. They fell by 0.5% and 1.06 %, respectively.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange fell. Rebar fell 0.8%, while hot-rolled coils dropped 0.63%. Wire rod slipped 0.24%, and stainless steel declined 0.59%. ($1 = 7.1230 Chinese yuan) (Reporting by Lucas Liew; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)

(source: Reuters)