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Iron ore damages amid waning China stimulus hopes, high portside stocks

Iron ore futures prices ticked lower on Monday, weighed down by decreasing hopes of more stimulus in top customer China, high portside stocks, and dangers of possible government intervention after a price rally last week.

The most-traded September iron ore contract on China's. Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) ended daytime trade. 0.06% lower at 866.5 yuan ($ 119.63) a metric load, following a. rise of more than 5% recently.

The benchmark May iron ore on the Singapore. Exchange was 0.34% lower at $116.05 a heap, as of 0705 GMT.

Iron ore prices will likely consolidate in the near term as. uncertainty sticks around on how much hot metal output can rise. further, analysts at Everbright Futures said in a note.

The main driving force behind a price rebound recently was. the macroeconomic factor and partially enhanced principles,. they stated, referring to enhanced steel margins and market. confidence and continuous destocking of steel products, amongst. others.

China left benchmark financing rates the same at a monthly. repairing, in line with market expectations, as. better-than-expected first-quarter financial information got rid of the. seriousness for Beijing to unveil fresh monetary stimulus to assist the. financial healing.

Iron ore stocks at major ports surveyed climbed by 0.5%. week-on-week to 145.59 million lots since April 19, data from. consultancy Mysteel revealed.

Other steelmaking ingredients on the DCE likewise pulled back,. with coking coal and coke down 0.86% and. 0.73%, respectively.

Steel criteria on the Shanghai Futures Exchange were. primarily lower. Rebar dipped 0.22%, hot-rolled coil. shed 0.65%, wire rod fell 0.83%, and. stainless steel edged down 0.21%.

Experts at Guotai Junan Securities anticipate China's crude. steel output in 2024 to be lower than the 2023 level and steel. intake to fall further, dragged down further by the. having a hard time property sector.

(source: Reuters)