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Iron ore prices rise as China's weak data boosts demand

Iron ore futures rose on Wednesday, ending multiple sessions of losses. This was after soft factory data in China, the top consumer, raised hopes for a new stimulus to boost economic growth by 2026.

After falling by 0.7% on the previous day, the?most-traded contract for iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange closed its daytime trading 1.85% higher.

As of 0748 GMT, the benchmark January iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange was up 0.84% at $102.65 per ton.

China's factory gate deflation has accelerated in the third year of its existence, and last month it reached a new high. This indicates a weakening domestic demand, which is not expected to improve soon.

Official data revealed that the producer price index (PPI), which measures prices for goods and services, fell by?2.2% in November compared to a fall of 2.1% in October. This was worse than expected, as the official data predicted a drop of?2%.

Analysts expect Beijing to take some measures to support growth in the first three months of 2026.

Iron ore prices rose despite the fact that analysts from China Mineral Resources Group (CMRG), a state-owned company, argued that current trends were not in line with fundamentals.

In a Tuesday statement posted on the WeChat page of the state-backed Steel Association, CMRG analysts said that "speculative activity among traders has amplified price fluctuation."

Prices are not likely to trend up in the fourth-quarter due to a backdrop of increasing supply and weakening consumer demand."

CMRG was 'established in 2022 for the centralisation of iron ore - purchases and to win better terms with miners.

Coking coal, another steelmaking ingredient, fell by 1.29%, while adding 0.36%.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange have gained ground. Rebar grew by 0.97%. Hot-rolled coils climbed by 0.58%. Wire rod jumped 0.27%. Stainless steel gained 0.24%. ($1 = 7.0617 Chinese Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Amy Lv, Lewis Jackson and Harikrishnan Nair).

(source: Reuters)