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Iron ore dips further on sticking around China demand issues

Iron ore futures declined for a third successive session on Wednesday to strike their lowest level in nearly 4 months, as concerns lingered over nearterm need in top consumer China.

The most-traded May iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange ended daytime trade 3.98% lower at 893 yuan ($ 124.29) per metric load, the lowest close since Oct. 31, after a more than 5% drop the day in the past.

The benchmark March iron ore on the Singapore Exchange was 1.8% lower at $118.65 a heap, as of 0702 GMT, also the lowest because Oct. 31.

Pressuring rates of the crucial steelmaking active ingredient is growing supply at a time when a healing in demand has actually been slower than anticipated after the week-long Lunar New Year holiday break, stated analysts.

Supply from significant producers Brazil and Australia so far has hovered at a reasonably high level compared to previous years; the weather so far this year in significant production centers is much better than the previous five-year average, stated Pei Hao, a Shanghai-based expert at worldwide brokerage FIS.

Weak success at lots of steel mills has actually limited an boost in ore demand in the near term.

Stocks of the five significant finished steel products held by traders in 132 cities nationwide had actually increased to a near 11-month high in the week ended Feb. 17, leaping 15.6% week-on-week, Mysteel's latest survey found.

Other steelmaking active ingredients on the DCE rose amidst supply concerns, with coking coal and coke climbing 6.19% and 3.79%, respectively.

Steel criteria on the Shanghai Futures Exchange ticked up amid greater basic materials rates.

Wire rod rose 1.21%, while rebar, hot-rolled coil and stainless-steel were bit changed.

(source: Reuters)