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Iron ore slips on falling near-term demand however heads for weekly gain

Iron ore futures rates fell on Friday as a continuous fall in nearterm China demand sparked restored caution among investors, although expectations of improved consumption in the coming peak building and construction season kept costs heading for a weekly gain.

The most-traded January iron ore agreement on China's Dalian Product Exchange (DCE) ended daytime trade 2.24%. lower at 719.5 yuan ($ 100.81) a metric heap.

It posted gains of 1.8% week-on-week, however was still 23.2%. lower from the start of the year.

The benchmark September iron ore on the Singapore. Exchange was 1.18% lower at $96.2 a ton, since 0843 GMT, a rise. of 4.6% up until now this week regardless of a fall of 26% from early. January.

Output of hot metal, a sign to gauge iron ore demand,. continued its succumb to a 5th successive week, showing that. near-term ore usage stayed subdued, said experts.

Typical everyday hot metal output amongst steelmakers surveyed. fell 1.9% on the week to 2.24 million loads as of Aug. 23, the. least expensive because early April, information from consultancy Mysteel revealed.

Broadening losses amongst Chinese steel mills likewise weighed on. buying cravings for the crucial steelmaking component.

Profitability amongst steelmakers dropped for 7. consecutive weeks to 1.3% from 4.76% previously, Mysteel data. showed.

The weekly gain came as relentless and sharp cost drops. propelled a wave of dip purchasing, especially ahead of 'golden. September', when downstream building and construction activities usually. get.

Iron ore fell to a more than one-year-low last week, dragged. by the weakening steel market where costs of some steel. items tumbled to multi-year lows, set off by the. requirement to change to brand-new steel standards in the middle of lengthy. home woes.

Steel benchmarks on the Shanghai Futures Exchange extended. loss. Rebar retreated 1.56%, hot-rolled coil. slid 1.86%, wire rod lost 1.75%, and stainless-steel. dipped 0.29%.

Other steelmaking active ingredients on the DCE lost ground, with. coking coal and coke down 3.35% and 3.08%,. respectively.

(source: Reuters)