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Iron ore prices rise as traders consider China's output reductions and seasonal steel demand

Iron ore prices rise as traders consider China's output reductions and seasonal steel demand

On Wednesday, iron ore futures traded in a tight range as investors weighed the impact of Chinese steel industry output cuts against the seasonal demand for this steelmaking ingredient.

As of 0301 GMT, the most-traded contract for May iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was trading 0.06% lower. It was 778 yuan (US$107.11) per metric ton.

The benchmark iron ore for April on the Singapore Exchange rose 0.07% to $101.65 per ton.

Rizhao Iron & Steel will complete the demolition of four blast furnaces of 1,080 cubic meters in early April. This will remove annual hot metal production of 1.9 millions tons, according both to Fubao consultancy and a source familiar with the issue.

Rizhao steel did not respond immediately to a comment request.

Local reports say that several steel producers in China's Xinjiang Region began cutting production from Monday. Beijing had earlier announced its intention to reduce capacity in a long-overcapacity industry.

Hexun Futures, an independent broker, reported that key steel companies produced 2,75 million tons per day of crude steel in March, representing a 1.6% increase on a month-to-month basis, according to statistics provided by the China Iron and Steel Association.

Mysteel, a Chinese consultancy, said that even though Chinese steel mills increased their production in the last week but prices of iron ore imported still fell significantly as end-users' steel consumption was weak.

ANZ analysts said that iron ore prices remained stable despite the construction industry entering its usual peak season. They added that the gains were offset due to signs of weakness on the steel market.

Coking coal and coke, which are used to make steel, also gained on the DCE. They rose by 0.1% and 1.13 percent, respectively.

The benchmark steel prices on the Shanghai Futures Exchange rose. The Shanghai Futures Exchange saw a rise in steel benchmarks. ($1 = 7.2636 Chinese Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Mrigank Dahniwala; Michele Pek)

(source: Reuters)