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Chinese coking coal reaches 19-month supply high

Chinese coking coal rose on Monday, reaching a 19-month high. A provincial-level meeting of mine safety in 'coal-rich Shanxi' reinforced the supply concerns that were stoked following production halts last month at some mines.

According to an official WeChat post on Sunday, Shanxi in northern China held a meeting Saturday regarding a special campaign to correct safety risks and hidden hazards in coal mines.

Officials in China's largest coal hub have pledged to take a "zero tolerance approach" and to identify and punish all illegal acts, including hidden tunnels, frauds in safety monitoring, and illegal mining outside the allowed area and layers.

A fatal mine accident that occurred in late May at the Liushenyu Mine, Shanxi, killed at least 80 people. This triggered a series of mine safety inspections, which led to several mines suspending production, and fueling fears about a shortage of supplies.

Analysts at broker Xinhu Futures wrote in a report that the'severity and extent of the accident are especially extensive, leaving little room for a rapid resumption of production in the near future.

By 0345 GMT, the most traded coking coal contract at Dalian Commodity Exchange rose 6.65% to $1370.5 yuan (about $202.50) per ton. The contract reached its highest level since 2024, at 1,384 Yuan.

The DCE coke contract that was most active jumped?4.55%, to 1,987.5 Yuan per ton. It had previously reached its highest level since?November 8th 2024 (?2,008.5 Yuan).

Prices of iron ore fell amid expectations that there would be a glut in supply due to increased shipments and seasonal slow demand.

The most active DCE contract fell 0.32% to 780 yuan per ton. Meanwhile, the benchmark July Iron Ore at the Singapore Exchange dropped 0.51% to $104.7 per ton.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange steel benchmarks mostly rose. The rebar price rose 0.6%. Hot-rolled coils gained 0.71%, and wire rod climbed by 0.95%. Stainless steel dropped 0.6%. $1 = 6.7678 Chinese Yuan (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu S. Sahu in Beijing, Amy Lv reporting from Shanghai)

(source: Reuters)