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China's June iron ore imports rise on increasing shipments

China's imports of iron ore in June increased by 8% compared to May, as some miner's increased shipments to reach quarterly targets after a slump in shipment in the first quarter because of cyclones that hit Australia.

Data from the General Administration of Customs revealed that the world's biggest iron ore consumer imported 105.95 millions metric tons of this key ingredient for steelmaking last month. This is the highest monthly total so far in the year.

This is up from 98.13 millions tons in May 2024 and also an increase of 8.5% compared to the 97.61million tons in June 2024.

Stronger-than-expected steel demand in the off-peak season due in part to robust steel exports also fuelled buying appetite for the key steelmaking ingredient, analysts said.

"Handy profits incentivized steelmakers to initiate a flurry of iron ore stockspiling, especially when the hot metal production remained at a relatively low level, contributing to increased imports last month," Cao Ying said, a Beijing analyst at broker SDIC Futures.

Portside inventories are up due to higher imports Steelhome's data showed that the number of tons produced by steel companies will increase 0.5% per month to 133.6 millions tonnes by late June.

China's imports of iron ore fell by 3% on an annual basis to 592.21 millions tons in the first half. (Reporting and editing by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)