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Dalian iron ore continues to rise but profit-taking limits gain

Dalian iron ore prices rose on Tuesday, adding to the gains of the previous session, but profit-booking and a shrinking basis were responsible for the modest increase.

As of 0201 GMT on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange, the most traded January iron ore contract was up 0.45% to 784.5 Yuan ($110.38), after gaining nearly 2% Monday.

As of 0151 GMT the benchmark December iron ore price on the Singapore Exchange had fallen by 0.42% to $103.95 per ton. This was after a day-long gain of over 1%.

A Singaporean trader, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak with the media, said: "Spot liquidity is quite lukewarm. It weighs on sentiment."

Mysteel, a consultancy, reported that the volume of seaborne and portside cargoes fell by 25,8% and 24,3%, respectively, from Monday's previous session.

A Shanghai-based analyst said that higher prices have reduced mills' purchasing appetite. Industrial participants remain bearish on the price trend due to rising inventories and seasonal weakening of steel demand.

The trader from Singapore said that the upward momentum also slowed down due to the narrowing of the basis, which is the difference between the spot and futures price.

The futures market prices were supported by the need for basis convergence and the narrowing of the gap between spot prices and futures. This was despite spot prices falling faster than futures earlier in this month.

Coke and other steelmaking materials, such as coking coal, fell by 3.48% and 2.68 percent, respectively.

The benchmark steel prices on the Shanghai Futures Exchange are mixed. The Shanghai Futures Exchange saw a mixed performance in steel benchmarks. Rebar gained 0.26%; hot-rolled coil remained unchanged; wire rod increased by 0.3% while stainless steel fell 0.24%. ($1 = 7,1075 Chinese Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson)

(source: Reuters)