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China's demand for iron ore is slower than expected

Iron ore futures fell on Tuesday amid a growing risk-off mood as fundamentals for the main steelmaking ingredient were unfavourable, and downstream steel consumption by China's largest consumer disappointed the market.

After a 6.1% increase on Friday, the most-traded contract for May iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange ended morning trading 2.3% lower.

As of 0327 GMT, the benchmark April iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange fell by 2.54% to $100.8 per ton.

Chu Xinli is a Shanghai-based China Futures analyst. "We believe this is a typical downward correction after a rapid rise in price in the last week, especially when there are no material improvements in fundamentals."

According to the latest data, ore shipments have remained relatively high while hot metal production has increased at a slower pace than expected.

Data from the China Iron and Steel Association, a state-sponsored organization, showed that the daily pig iron output of member steelmakers was around 1.84 millions tons between March 11-20. This is down by 0.41% compared to the previous ten days and down by 6.56% compared to the year before.

Analysts said that the recent restocking by steelmakers has also weighed down the buying appetite on the seaborne market.

Mysteel, a consultancy, reported that the seaborne iron ore transition volumes fell by 73.4% between last Friday and Monday.

Coking coal and coke, which are both steelmaking ingredients, also fell by 1.89% and 3.26 %, respectively.

The benchmark steel prices on the Shanghai Futures Exchange are generally lower. Rebar fell 1.81%, while hot-rolled coils dropped 1.07%. Wire rod edged lower by 0.26%, and stainless steel fell 1.18%.

Analysts at Galaxy Futures stated in a report that a lack of capital had slowed the construction of property and infrastructure projects in the first three months of 2024. $1 = 7.2169 Chinese Yuan (Reporting and editing by Amy Lv, Andrew Hayley)

(source: Reuters)