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Iron ore falls to a one-month low due to rising supply and China's demand concerns

Iron ore falls to a one-month low due to rising supply and China's demand concerns
Iron ore falls to a one-month low due to rising supply and China's demand concerns

Iron ore prices fell on Thursday, to their lowest level in more than a year. This was due to a combination of rising supply and concerns about the prospects for demand in China's top consumer.

Iron ore, the most traded contract on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange(DCE), fell 2.14% and is now 753 yuan per metric ton. This is its lowest price since March 5. Instead of May, the September contract is now most traded.

The benchmark May ore price on the Singapore Exchange dropped 2.1% to $1003.55 per?ton at 0333 GMT after hitting its lowest level since March 10 when it was $103 earlier in the session.

Iron ore prices are under pressure due to higher shipments, according to analysts at broker Jinyuan?Futures in a recent note.

They said that low profitability among steelmakers will disincentivise the mills to ramp up production. This would suggest a "limited upside" for demand.

Analysts and traders, who spoke on condition of anonymity due to the sensitive nature of the issue, also said that speculation that China's iron ore buyer, the state-owned China Iron Ore Company, and the global miner BHP could potentially come to an agreement for a 2026 contract term contract weighed heavily on the prices.

This is because a resolution to the long-running dispute will increase the availability of spot cargo at ports.

The China Mineral Resources Group, established in 2022 with the goal of centralising iron ore procurement to win better terms from mines, is locked in a supply contract negotiations with BHP. This has banned domestic steel mills from buying some brands of iron ore.

Brandon Craig, the incoming CEO of BHP, met on Wednesday with the Chairman of Chinalco, a Chinese aluminium giant. Craig had stated last month that he was focusing on strengthening BHP's relationship in China.

Coke and other steelmaking ingredients are mixed.

The benchmark steel prices on the Shanghai Futures Exchange have been moving sideways. Rebar fell 0.19%, while hot-rolled coils dipped 0.06%. Wire rod grew 0.49%, and stainless steel gained 0.6%. Reporting by Beijing Newsroom and Lewis Jackson, Editing by Subhranshu sahu

(source: Reuters)