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Iron ore prices rise as a result of the Iran War; iron ore shipments drop

Iron ore prices rise as a result of the Iran War; iron ore shipments drop
Iron ore prices rise as a result of the Iran War; iron ore shipments drop

Iron ore prices recovered from earlier losses and traded higher on Monday as investors focused their attention on potentially?higher shipping rates after the Iran conflict, along with falling shipments?from major suppliers.

The most traded iron ore contract on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange closed the daytime trading 0.87% higher, at 754.5 Yuan ($109.64).

As of 0731 GMT, the benchmark April iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange was up 0.85% at $99.2 per ton.

In a recent note, Zhengxin Futures analysts stated that the rising oil prices due to the U.S. - Iran conflict?increased freight costs and therefore supported iron ore prices.

Analysts and data from Mysteel say that a drop in shipments by top suppliers Australia, and Brazil, who were both down 0.8% on a week-on-week basis, also helped to boost prices.

Ore prices dropped earlier in the session due to 'production curbs' in China’s key?steel?hub Tangshan after a forecast for worsening air pollution activated level-two emergency responses from Sunday. These measures, which require mills in the area to reduce production and lower demand for raw materials to cool down, are a follow-up to earlier calls to northern Chinese mills for them to reduce output during the annual parliament meeting beginning March 5.

Guiqiu Zihuo, a broker at Jinrui Futures, cited the slow recovery in steel demand as well as the mounting steel stock and elevated portside inventories that weighed down on ore prices.

Iron ore stocks in major Chinese ports Steelhome data showed that the number of tons reached a new record on February 27.

Coking coal, and other steelmaking components, also recovered from earlier losses, closing daytime trades up by 1.06% and 1.38 %, respectively.

The benchmark steel prices on the Shanghai Futures Exchange have gained a lot of ground. Rebar gained 0.26%; hot-rolled coils advanced 0.34%; wire rod increased 0.24%; and stainless steel rose 1.91%.

(source: Reuters)