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Iron ore is struggling to find its direction as portside inventories increase, and demand will pick up

Iron ore is struggling to find its direction as portside inventories increase, and demand will pick up
Iron ore is struggling to find its direction as portside inventories increase, and demand will pick up

Dalian ore futures were unable to find direction on Friday, as traders weighed China's increasing portside iron ore inventory at the end of the pre-Lunar New Year window against the expectation that the demand for feedstock would soon increase.

The May contract for iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange ended the daytime trading 0.06% higher, at 791.5 Yuan ($113.91).

This week's contract gained 0.18%, reversing the previous week’s decline.

As of 0717 GMT, the benchmark March iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange was down 1.03% at $103.7 per?ton and had declined by 1.08% for this week.

According to a report from the Shanghai Metals Market, China's iron ore portside inventories?continued accumulating, but transaction volume has been sluggish.

The note said that fine ore and pellets were destocked, but coarse?fines had a large inventory increase.

Everbright Futures, a Chinese broker, claims that the recent bullish trend in commodities and precious metals has supported ferrous metals prices.

The iron ore restocking period is nearing the end with only 12 trading days until the Chinese Lunar New Year. This means that the upside potential for the metals will be limited, according to a report by Shanghai Steel Union's chief steel analyst, Wang Jianhua.

Forty-four independent electric-arc-furnaces (EAF) will be shutting down from ?February 1-8 for maintenance, according to a Mysteel survey.

According to Mysteel, the EAF currently accounts for around 10% of China's total steel production, with blast furnaces accounting for the remaining 90%.

The demand for steel feedstock is expected to rise as more steel mills resume production next week following planned maintenance.

Coking coal and coke, which are both steelmaking ingredients, have also risen on the DCE.

The benchmark steel prices on the Shanghai Futures Exchange have fallen. Rebar fell 0.48%, while hot-rolled coils dropped 0.3%. Wire rods also declined 2.45%, and stainless steel dropped 0.29%. ($1 = 6.9485 Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Ronojoy Mazumdar).

(source: Reuters)