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Sources say that China has restricted some Fortescue iron-ore cargoes due to deteriorating talks.

Sources say that China has restricted some Fortescue iron-ore cargoes due to deteriorating talks.
Sources say that China has restricted some Fortescue iron-ore cargoes due to deteriorating talks.

Sources in the industry said that China's state buyer of iron ore has asked some domestic steel mills to not accept certain portside products of iron ore from Fortescue. This is the latest Australian miner to be snared by Beijing's efforts to 'increase' control over the market.

Five sources familiar with the matter said that China Mineral Resources Group (CMRG), notified mills verbally on July 15th, they should not accept portside cargoes containing Fortescue’s Super Special Fines or Fortune Fines. These are both lower-grade products of iron ore.

The move is part of CMRG’s campaign to assert its control over the way iron ore is entered into the Chinese?market. It follows a months-long dispute with BHP, which ended in April. Fortescue exports most of its iron ores to China, and is still negotiating with CMRG about supply terms.

CMRG - and Fortescue - did not respond immediately to requests for comments outside of 'working hours.

As of 1503 GMT, the most active August 'iron ore futures' contract on the Singapore Exchange had risen 2.53% to $100 per metric ton after reaching its highest level since June 17, at $101.2 during the evening trading session.

As of June 30, a trader who requested anonymity said that Fortescue’s Super Special fines stocks in some major Chinese port cities stood at 7,22 million tons.

According to data from Steelhome, this represents almost 5% of the total portside stocks of iron ore. .

CMRG told some domestic'steelmakers last month not to discuss with Fortescue a new iron-ore product - Fortune Fines – scheduled for shipments starting in July.

Fortescue confirmed that its China president left in June, only four months after taking up the position.

BHP announced in mid-April it had ended supply contract negotiations with CMRG. This was the end of a long-running dispute. Beijing then lifted its bans on a number of BHP's products.

CMRG, which was founded in 2022, is part of Beijing’s effort to centralise iron ore procurement as well as win better terms from mining giants upstream. (Reporting and editing by Emelia Sithole Matarise and Kevin Liffey; Staff)

(source: Reuters)