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Restocking iron ore amid a softening of near-term Chinese demand

The iron ore futures price fluctuated on Thursday as market participants weighed the prospects of increased supply and a possible restock by steelmakers against a softening in demand near-term from China, which is the top consumer.

By 0210 GMT, the most traded January iron ore contract at China's Dalian Commodity Exchange rose 0.26% to reach 772.5 Yuan ($108.45).

As of 2200 GMT, the benchmark December iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange was down 0.32% at $102.45 per ton.

Analysts at Shengda Futures stated in a report that traders have shifted their attention back to fundamentals which are on the weaker side.

Prices were pushed down earlier this month by the expectation of a growing supply and a softer demand for the rest of the year.

Analysts at broker Jinyuan Futures wrote in a report that some steelmakers have increased maintenance on equipment due to shrinking margins.

Analysts at Shengda said that the market had already digested a few of the negative expectations and valuations have been restored.

Analysts also said that the prices were supported by hopes that Chinese steelmills would begin restocking seaborne shipments in preparation for meeting needs during Chinese New Year in February.

Analysts said that the trend to reduce the basis (the difference between spot prices and futures) also helped futures prices remain resilient.

A Shanghai-based analyst, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the media, stated that futures prices fell at a faster pace than spot markets earlier in the month.

Coke and other steelmaking components, such as coking coal, both fell by 0.33% and 0.38 respectively.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange were traded within a narrow range. Rebar, hot-rolled coil and stainless steel were all little changed.

(source: Reuters)