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As mill maintenance and rising China port stock weigh, iron ore falls

The price of iron ore futures fell on Tuesday due to steel mills performing annual furnace maintenance, and a rise in?Chinese ports inventories.

As of 0258 GMT, the most-traded contract for May iron ore?on China’s Dalian Commodity Exchange(DCE)?traded 0.64% lower at 775.5 Yuan ($110.30).

The benchmark January Iron Ore at the Singapore Exchange fell by 0.49% to $104.25 per ton.

The steel mills have annual blast furnace maintenance plans which are causing a decline in pig iron production. Port inventories are continuing to build up, showing a slight weakening of the fundamentals.

SteelHome data shows that total iron ore stocks across Chinese ports increased by 1.19% week-on-week, to 145.5 million tonnes as of December 19.

Steel producers reported mixed results.

Japan's crude output of steel fell by 1.6% in November from the same month a year earlier, to 6.77 millions tons. India's production of steel grew 6.1% on an annual basis against a 5.9% increase that was revised upwards for October.

The dollar index, which measures currency against six different units, fell to 98.18 at the start of trading on Tuesday. It is still on track to drop 9.5% for the year. This will be its biggest annual fall since 2017.

Dollar-denominated investments are more affordable for holders of currencies other than the greenback.

The DCE showed a?mixed picture of other steelmaking ingredients, with coking coke up 1.04% but coke down by 0.17%.

Mysteel said that China's supply of coking coal continued to tighten as of December 22. This was due to strict safety inspections and slower production at the end-of-year. However, a softer downstream market capped price increases.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange mostly rose. The Shanghai Futures Exchange saw a majority of steel benchmarks in the green.

(source: Reuters)