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Iron ore prices fall on a weak China demand. Pre-holiday stocking helps limit losses

Iron ore prices fall on a weak China demand. Pre-holiday stocking helps limit losses

Iron ore futures prices fell on Thursday due to a lack of demand in China's infrastructure and manufacturing sectors. However, inventory replenishment before the Chinese National Day holiday helped limit losses.

As of 0255 GMT, the most traded January iron ore contract at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was down by 0.12% to 800 yuan (about $112.57) per metric ton.

On the Singapore Exchange, September benchmark iron ore traded at $105.25 per ton. This is a 0.19% decrease.

According to Chinese broker Galaxy Futures, on the demand side, both manufacturing and infrastructure investments continued to show negative growth year-over-year in August. Meanwhile, end-use demand for steel fell dramatically in the third quarter compared to the 7% increase year-over-year in manufacturing steel consumption during the first half.

Galaxy said that the iron metals sector could benefit from the upcoming replenishment of inventories ahead of Chinese National Day holiday.

Hot metal production, which is a measure of demand for iron ore, has increased from month to month to 2,4055 million tonnes, according to Everbright Futures.

China's crude iron ore production in August was 8.8% higher than the previous year, at 81.63 millions metric tons. Meanwhile, shipments of the top producer Brazil increased during the third quarter.

The dollar index, a measure of the U.S. currency compared to six major counterparts, dropped to its lowest level since February 2022 after the Federal Reserve cut interest rates. However, it rebounded and now stands at 97.074.

Dollar-denominated investments are less affordable for holders of currencies other than the greenback.

Coking coal and coke, which are used in the steelmaking process, have both fallen by 0.89% and 0.26 %, respectively.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange saw a decline in all steel benchmarks. Hot-rolled coils fell 0.65%, rebar dropped 0.51%, wire rod fell 0.24%, and stainless steel declined 0.19%.

(source: Reuters)