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China's iron ore imports in 2024 struck a new high on durable demand

China's iron ore imports in 2024 increased for a 2nd straight year to hit a new record high, up 4.9% from the prior year, customizeds information showed on Monday, as lower costs stimulated purchasing appetite and need stayed durable regardless of a slump.

The world's biggest iron ore customer brought in a total of about 1.24 billion metric lots in 2015, information from the nation's General Administration of Customs revealed, versus 1.18 billion metric loads in 2023 when it posted an annual boost of 6.6%.

Although steel output slid by 2.7% from the year before in the first 11 months of 2024 and was on track for a yearly decrease, demand for the key steelmaking ingredient remained strong as it's still more cost competitive to produce steel from the blast furnace-basic oxygen heating system that consumes iron ore.

In contrast, the electric arc furnace-based steelmakers that consumption scrap product had to either conduct maintenance or scale down production due to losses amid relentless constraints on scrap supply.

In addition, traders that had actually purchased high-cost iron ore earlier last year continued buying for the essential steelmaking ingredient in a bid to balance out their general production costs and reduce loss, said experts.

Greater imports added to a price depression and a pile-up in portside stocks << SH-TOT-IRONINV >, which climbed up by 28 %. year-on-year to 146.85 million tons since Dec. 27, information from. consultancy Steelhome revealed.

Iron ore prices << SH-CCN-IRNOR62 > moved by 31% in 2015,. according to Steelhome data. In December alone, China imported 112.49 million lots of. iron ore, up 10.4% from 101.86 million heaps in November. The December volume compared to 100.86 million loads

in the. same month in 2023. China's iron ore imports are most likely to strike a brand-new high

in. 2025 as traders stock low-cost ore for the world's top customer. despite a drawn-out property crisis continuing to weigh on. Chinese steel need, traders and analysts stated.

(source: Reuters)