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China's Iron Ore Starts New Year Higher on Strong Demand and Tight Supplies

China's Iron Ore Starts New Year Higher on Strong Demand and Tight Supplies
China's Iron Ore Starts New Year Higher on Strong Demand and Tight Supplies

China's Iron Ore Futures rose in the first trading session of the New Year on Monday. Strong?demand and supply constraints supported the rise.

The May contract for iron ore on the Dalian Commodity Exchange gained 7.5 Yuan or 0.95% to 797 Yuan ($114.16).

After the New Year's?holiday, Chinese markets resumed their trading. The benchmark iron ore contract for February on the Singapore Exchange rose 0.29% at $105.65 per ton by 0704 GMT.

Steelmakers are restocking iron ore ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday, which is in February. Tight domestic supplies also support prices.

According to a report from the?Shanghai Metals Market, several mines have limited production due to environmental measures. Mysteel, a consultancy, reported that stocks of five major carbon products held by Chinese?mills dropped 1.1% on a weekly basis to 3.81 millions tonnes between December 26 and 31. The DCE also saw a decline in other steelmaking ingredients, including coke and?coking?coal. The SHFE steel benchmarks were mixed. Rebar fell by 0.74%; hot-rolled coils dropped by 0.79%, and stainless steel was down 0.23%. Wire rod, meanwhile, gained 4.93%.

(source: Reuters)