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Steel production increases as demand for building materials rises

Steel production increases as demand for building materials rises

Iron ore futures prices increased on Monday as demand for building material grew ahead of National Day, and blast furnace steel production increased.

As of 0233 GMT, the most-traded contract for January iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was trading 1.12% higher. It was 814.5 Yuan ($114.50), per metric ton.

The benchmark iron ore for September on the Singapore Exchange rose 0.09% to $105.8 per tonne.

According to Chinese consultancy Mysteel, the overall production of Chinese blast furnace steel continued to rise in the week ending September 18. It increased by 0.2 percentage point to 90.4%. This was largely because operations were resumed in North China.

The combined hot metal production, a measure of iron ore consumption, increased by 0.2% compared to the previous week, reaching 2.41 million tonnes per day.

Broker Hexun Futures said that the demand for building materials has been increasing, as a result of ongoing inventory reductions, and an increase in downstream restocking before Chinese National Day.

Steelhome data shows that the total iron ore stocks in China's ports fell by 0.42% on a week-on-week basis to 132 million tonnes as of September 19.

In September, China's benchmark lending rates remained unchanged for the 4th consecutive month, despite signs that domestic growth was slowing.

According to the World Steel Association, global crude steel production in July was 150.1 million tonnes, a 1.3% decrease year-on-year. Chinese output, at 79.7 millions tons, was 4% less.

Coking coal and coke were both up or down by 0.14% on the DCE.

In August, China's imports of coal reached a record high for eight months. This was largely due to higher domestic prices. Volumes remained 7% below a year ago due to weak demand and increased domestic supply.

All steel benchmarks at the Shanghai Futures Exchange have gained ground. Rebar increased by 1.08%. Hot-rolled coils gained 0.74%. Wire rods increased 0.24%. Stainless steel rose 0.58%. $1 = 7.1138 Chinese yuan (Reporting and editing by Eileen Soreng; Lucas Liew)

(source: Reuters)