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China's imports of iron ore in November fell due to a shrinking margin

China's imports of iron ore in November fell due to a shrinking margin
China's imports of iron ore in November fell due to a shrinking margin

China's imports of iron ore in November dropped for the second consecutive month by 0.7% compared to the previous month. The decline was due to a decrease in buying interest after several mills began equipment maintenance because profit margins were shrinking.

Data from the General Administration of Customs revealed on Monday that China imported 110.54 millions metric tons of this key ingredient for steelmaking last month.

It was less than 111.3 millions tons in October, but higher than 101.86 in the same month of last year.

Last month, more steel mills performed maintenance on furnaces as iron ore prices remained stable and steel demand was weakening.

Mysteel, a consultancy, reported that the average daily hot metal production - an indicator of demand – fell 1.7% in November compared to the previous month.

Mysteel's data shows that only 35% (down from 45%) of steel mills made a profit at the end November, compared to late October.

Imports were above 100 million tonnes for the sixth consecutive month, contributing towards a build-up of portside stocks.

Portside inventory Steelhome's data showed that at the end of November, shipments had risen 2.5% compared to a month ago.

Iron ore imports in the first 11 month of 2025 rose by 1.4% compared to the same period the year before, reaching 1.139 billion tonnes, setting the annual record.

In November, steel exports increased by 2% over the previous month to 9,98 million tons. This represents an increase of 7.5% year-over-year.

The November shipments brought the year-to date exports to 107.72 millions tons, which is a record for this period. This represents an increase of 6.7%. (Reporting and editing by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson and Christopher Cushing).

(source: Reuters)