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Trump accepts two-week truce after iron ore prices fall and shipments increase

Iron ore futures fell on Wednesday as shipments of the key ingredient in steelmaking from major suppliers surged, and U.S. president Donald Trump agreed to an?two-week ceasefire? with Iran.

As of 0212 GMT, the most traded?iron ore?contract at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange dropped 1.12% to 791.5 Yuan ($115.87), a metric tonne. The price fell to its lowest level since March 12, at 789.5 Yuan, earlier in the day.

As of 0202 GMT, the benchmark May 'iron ore was trading at $105.75 per ton on the Singapore Exchange.

As of April 7, iron ore shipments from Australia and Brazil, two major suppliers, jumped by 30.5% on a weekly basis to 24,48 million tons. This was due to weather-related disruptions in Australia.

Galaxy Futures analysts said that "high shipments and portside stocks, combined with expectations 'that it is hard to see downstream consumption improving materially,'" pushed ore prices. Rio Tinto announced last month that three of Rio's Pilbara iron-ore port terminals had resumed operations following Tropical Cyclone Narelle.

According to Rio, two tropical cyclones between February and March affected the firm's iron ore shipment by 8 million tons. Trump's announcement on social media was also a sudden change from earlier that day. It sent oil prices tumbling and temporarily eased supply jitters as well as inflation fears.

Coking coal and coke both increased by 0.32%, while coke decreased by 0.03%.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange were weaker. Rebar fell?0.38%. Hot-rolled coils dropped 0.21%. Wire rod dropped 1.03%. Stainless steel gained 0.35%.

(source: Reuters)