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Dalian iron ore prices end the week lower due to improved supply and soft Chinese demand

Dalian iron-ore futures fell on Friday, and the week ended lower as rising seaborne shipments at year's end and tepid Chinese demands weighed.

The January contract for iron ore most traded on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange fell by 1.01%, to 785.5 Yuan ($111.12), per metric ton. The contract closed the week at a 0.57% decrease.

As of 0708 GMT, the benchmark January iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange fell 0.92% to $1003.3 per ton. It was still on track to finish the week at 1.48%.

Iron ore shipments are expected to rise near the end of the year, and will be further loosen in December, with an increase in carriers arriving, whereas demand for steelmaking materials is likely to fall amid production cuts in steel mills. This was noted by consultancy Mysteel.

In November, the top Brazilian producer shipped nearly 34.5 millions tons of grain by sea. This was an increase of 2.93% on a year-on-year basis.

Mysteel said that positive macroeconomic signals as well as anticipated restocking demands among steelmakers would lend some support.

We see the iron ore markets in a surplus this year, and we see this surplus growing over the next couple of years. Analysts from Citi said that with Simandou online, and China's steel production on a structural decrease, prices will trade on fundamentals in the future and tend closer to costs.

Simandou's iron ore project, which is expected to have a production capacity of 120,000,000 metric tons per year, will be the largest iron ore mine in the world, and will play a key role in the green transformation of the global steel value chains.

Coking coal and coke, which are used in the steelmaking process, have both fallen by 2.31% and 3.15 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 fell 0.09%, hot-rolled coil closed level while wire rod rose 1.12% and stainless steel firmed up 0.52%. ($1 = 7,0688 Chinese yuan). (Reporting and editing by Lucas Liew, Sumana Niandy, Sherry Jacob Phillips).

(source: Reuters)