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Iron ore prices continue to fall on the back of rising supplies and a slowdown in demand

Iron ore prices continue to fall on the back of rising supplies and a slowdown in demand

The price of iron ore futures fell for the second consecutive session on Wednesday. This was due to a combination of a slowdown in China's demand and an increase in shipments from Australia.

The day-end price of the most traded September iron ore contract at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was 702.5 yuan (US$97.97).

As of 0728 GMT, the benchmark July Iron Ore traded on Singapore Exchange had fallen 0.25% to a ton price of $92.75

Mysteel, a Chinese consultancy, said that the total volume of iron-ore shipments by top suppliers Australia, Brazil, and South Africa increased to 30,1 million tons between June 16-22. This is a record for ONE YEAR. In a recent note, ANZ analysts stated that iron ore prices continued to decline due to signs of stable supply.

ANZ has also noted that the construction industry typically slows down during summer. This will likely lead to a further decline in Chinese imports of Iron Ore. Rio Tinto, the largest iron ore producer in the world, received approval from Australian government for its Hope Downs 2 Project.

The joint venture project between Rio Tinto, Hancock Prospecting and others will have a production capacity of 31 millions tons per year.

Rio Tinto expects to spend more than 13 billion dollars on new mines and plant over the next 3 years.

Meanwhile, the British government is expected to impose tougher-than-expected trade caps on steel as the country attempts to support its domestic industry amid a global oversupply.

Coking coal and coke both rose in the DCE, by 0.75% each.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange saw a decline in most steel benchmarks. Wire rod and hot-rolled colums fell 0.58% while stainless steel rose 1.25 percent.

(source: Reuters)