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Iron ore is in short supply as steel demand remains steady, despite a rise in ore production.

On Friday, iron ore futures were unable to find a direction as a steady demand for steel for construction was countered by?prospects for rising supplies of the steelmaking component.

As of 0303 GMT, the most-traded?iron ore September contract on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was?0.32%?higher. It stood at 787.5 Yuan ($115.19), a metric tonne. The contract is up 1.22% this week.

The benchmark iron ore for May on the Singapore Exchange rose 0.1% to $106.8 per ton. This represents a gain of 0.95% in the last week.

According to Mysteel, the Chinese supply of finished products increased by 78.900 tons or 0.9% week-on-week. Inventory decreased by 621.200 tons or 3.5%.

Construction was the primary driver of the?increased demand for steel products, which indicates a steady demand for steel and feedstock.

Prices were also supported by restocking before China's five day May Day holiday.

The resolution of a long-running dispute between BHP and China Mineral Resources Group over BHP's contract to supply iron ore has raised the prospects for more shipments.

Fortescue, an Australian mining company, reported a 5% increase in its third-quarter iron ore shipment, thanks to a strong performance from?its Hematite operations, and boosted contribution from the Iron Bridge Project.

Iron ore was shipped by the world's 4th-largest miner in 48.4 Mt during the quarter ended March 31. This compares to 46.1 Mt a year ago.

World Steel Association data released on Thursday showed that the crude steel production in China, which is the world's largest producer and consumer of the metal, dropped 6.3% to 87.0 millions?tons.

Coking coal and coke both fell by 0.12% and 0.944% respectively.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange steel benchmarks were mixed. Rebar rose 0.009%; hot-rolled coil fell 0.06%; wire rod increased 0.28%; and stainless steel gained 1.65%.

(source: Reuters)