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Simandou iron ore project begins supply

Iron ore prices continued to fall on Tuesday as the Simandou project, located in Guinea in west Africa,?shipped out its first ore. This increased prospects for more supply, at a time when China, the top consumer, is expected to see a decline in demand due?to falling steel production.

The most traded iron ore contract at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was down 1.51% as of 0229 GMT. Its lowest price since July 10, and headed for its fifth straight session of losses.

As of 0219 GMT the benchmark January iron ore price on the Singapore Exchange fell for a third session in a row, falling 0.94% to $100.11 per ton. This is its lowest level since November 10.

Rio Tinto, the largest iron ore exporter in the world, announced on Monday that the first shipment of the Simandou Project had left Guinea.

The mine will have a production capacity of 120,000,000 tons per year, making it the largest iron ore mine in the world.

China imports 80% of its iron ore from Australia and Brazil.

Analysts predict that the share of Guinean supply will fall as it increases.

Analysts at broker Xinhu Futures stated in a report that the near-month contract would face 'further pressure due to high supply, swollen inventory, and decreasing demand.

This year, China's crude steel production is expected to drop below 1 billion tons for the first time in six years.

Coking coal and other?steelmaking components coke and coking coal both fell, by 2.39% and 2.67 percent, respectively. This was due to lingering fears about an increasing supply.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange saw a decline in most steel benchmarks. Rebar fell 1.5%, while hot-rolled coil dropped 1.27%. Wire rod also declined 0.38%. Stainless steel was not affected.

(source: Reuters)