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China's coking coal prices fall due to slump in steel demand

Chinese coking 'prices' pared gains earlier to trade lower?Thursday, as concerns about demand prospects for steelmaking ingredients were fueled by a slump in steel consumption.

Data from the consultancy Mysteel revealed that apparent consumption of five major steel products sank 6.5% on a week-on week basis as of Thursday. This compares to a gain of 3.1% during the previous week.

Steel prices and feedstocks were under pressure due to the deteriorating market sentiment.

The Dalian Commodity Exchange's (DCE) most traded coking coal contract closed the daytime trading 0.88% lower, at 1,238.5 Yuan ($181.99) a metric ton.

The most actively traded DCE coke contract lost 0.77% of its earlier gains, trading at 1,932 Yuan per ton. The price declines were however capped by the slow recovery of production in the north province of Shanxi - in the wake of a fatal mining accident that occurred in late May, and the strict safety inspections being conducted in this coal-rich area. According to a Mysteel report on Wednesday, the pace of recovery has slowed in Shanxi, as the number of mines in certain areas that have halted their production is on the increase.

The price of coking coal has risen after a deadly mine accident in China triggered "widespread and stringent safety checks across China's largest coal production hub", causing supply concerns.

The price of iron ore also fell, with the most-traded DCE contract ending daytime trade at 735 yuan per tonne and the benchmark July ore at the Singapore Exchange falling 0.88% to $97.5 per tonne, as of 08:00 GMT.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange were weaker. Rebar and hot-rolled coil lost 0.45%. Wire rod fell 1.06%. Stainless steel fell 0.51%.

Analysts at Lange Steel wrote in a report that the daily crude steel production in June will be around 2.7 million tons, up from 2.72 million tonnes in May, according to official data. $1 = 6.8052 Chinese Yuan (Reporting and editing by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)