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Iron ore prices drop to six-day lows as feedstock prices fall.

The price of steelmaking ingredients, which have been consistently low, has allowed steel mills to purchase more feedstock.

The May contract for iron ore most traded on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange ended the morning trading 1.02% higher, at 793.5 Yuan ($113.95).

The contract is set to lose 2.64% this week.

As of 0330 GMT, the benchmark February iron ore traded on Singapore Exchange was up 0.93% at $104.6 per ton.

The contract has been set to a weekly decline of 1.65%.

According to a report from the Shanghai Metals Market, the continuous decline in iron ore price helped to alleviate the market's pessimism. This allowed steel mills more time to purchase iron ore while maintaining their profit margins before the Chinese Lunar New Year.

A trader with knowledge of the issue said that steel profit margins were still acceptable due to low prices for coking coal, coke and other ingredients used in steelmaking.

He added that hot metal production is expected to continue to rise, while the inventory of steel mills still has some room for growth.

According to a Mysteel note, several short-process mills in Guangxi & Guangdong are planning to suspend production by late January, before the Chinese Lunar New Year holiday. Production will resume in March.

According to ANZ Research's commodity report, released on January 23, despite the fact that China's property market is expected to remain in a slump, fixed-asset investment in infrastructure?should mitigate the fall in construction demand in 2026.

The report said that energy-related investments will likely increase as funding pressures ease. This will allow for an increased pick-up of infrastructure investment.

Coking coal and coke, which are used to make steel, also gained on the DCE. They rose by 1.11% and 1.5% respectively.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange have strengthened. Rebar climbed 0.38%. Hot-rolled coils climbed 0.3%. Wire rod increased 0.2%. Stainless steel grew 0.98%. ($1 = 6.9633 Yuan) (Reporting and editing by Janane Venkatraman; Reporting by Ruth Chai)

(source: Reuters)