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Dalian iron ore drops on increasing portside inventories, but heads for a weekly gain

Dalian iron ore prices fell for the second time on Friday, due to higher portside inventories of this key ingredient in steelmaking. However, expectations that demand would improve kept prices on track towards a weekly increase.

The May contract for iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange closed morning trade at 816 Yuan ($116.92), a 0.5% decrease. The contract is up 3.4% this week.

By 0337 GMT the benchmark February iron ore price on the Singapore Exchange had risen 2.7% to $108.25 per ton.

Data from Mysteel revealed that inventories of?imported ore in major Chinese ports had risen for the seventh consecutive week. They were up 1.9%?week-on?week by January 8 and close to the record high?of 162.8 millions tons.

Mysteel data shows that steel inventories increased 1.9% from one week to the next, which also affected sentiment.

Steelmakers' expectations that they will restock feedstocks ahead of the Lunar New Year holiday (February) and firm demand in the near term helped to limit losses in Dalian iron-ore futures.

Investors also digested China's latest inflation data.

China's annual consumer?inflation increased to a high of 34 months in December. However, the rate for the entire year?slammed to its lowest level in 16 years, while the producer deflation continued, supporting market expectations that more stimulus would be needed to boost the soft demand.

Coking coal and coke, which are both steelmaking ingredients, traded at lower prices on the DCE. They were down by 1.08% and 2.13 %, respectively.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange have fallen. Rebar fell 1.04%, while hot-rolled coil dropped 1.11%. Wire rod was down 0.03%, and stainless steel was down 0.43%. $1 = 6.9792 Chinese Yuan (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu S. Sahu).

(source: Reuters)