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Iron ore to suffer second consecutive weekly loss due to high China stocks

Iron ore to suffer second consecutive weekly loss due to high China stocks
Iron ore to suffer second consecutive weekly loss due to high China stocks

Iron ore prices continued to fall on Friday for a second consecutive session. They were also set 'for a second week of declines,' mainly due to the high portside stock levels in a major consumer, China. However, signs of improved demand helped limit this drop.

The iron ore contract most traded on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange closed the daytime trading down 0.5% to 799.5 Yuan ($116.26), posting a week-long fall of 1.5%.

As of 0700 GMT the benchmark May iron ore traded on the Singapore Exchange was 0.92% lower, at $105.4 per ton. This represents a 1.7% drop so far this week.

Analysts said that the trade was dominated by downward pressure due to high portside stock, but there were no significant changes in supply and demand.

Data from Mysteel showed that iron ore inventories at 47 Chinese ports increased 0.5% in a week to 177.5 millions tons on?April 2. This is close to the record high of 180.9 million tons reached?in late March.

Concerns that the availability of spot iron ore could increase if China’s state iron buyer and BHP made progress in negotiations regarding a supply contract for 2026 weighed heavily on sentiment.

Vietnam's trade ministry reported that prices were also being impacted by a temporary antidumping levy up to 27,83% on certain Chinese hot-rolled steel coil products, starting April 17.

The downside was however capped by signs that demand had improved as some mills recommenced production following maintenance.

Mysteel data shows that the?average daily metal production, which is a measure of iron ore consumption, increased by?2.7% on a week-on-week basis to 2.37 million tonnes as of April 2, marking its highest level since October 2025.

Analysts at the ship-tracking company Kpler say that "the ongoing conflict in Middle East continues to exert indirect pressure by driving up fuel and freight costs."

Coking coal and coke, the other ingredients used in steelmaking, also declined by 1.2% and 0.86% respectively.

The benchmarks for steel on the Shanghai Futures Exchange are mixed. Rebar fell 0.23%, while hot-rolled coils dropped 0.24%. Wire rod rose 2.18 percent, and stainless steel gained 0.78%.

(source: Reuters)