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Dalian iron ore erases early-session gains
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SGX iron slips, but stays above $130/tonne
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Rebar, hot-rolled coil hit 9-month highs
(Releads, updates prices)
By Enrico Dela Cruz
March 14 (Reuters) - Dalian iron ore futures pulled back
from a contract high on Tuesday, although losses were limited by
buoyant steel prices in top steel producer China.
Steel benchmarks scaled nine-month peaks, propelled by
improved demand prospects as China has entered its peak spring
construction season and more evidence of economic recovery have
emerged.
The most-traded May iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity
Exchange ended daytime trade 0.2% lower at 920 yuan
($134.02) a tonne. It hit 936 yuan earlier in the session, a new
high for the contract.
Benchmark April iron ore on the Singapore Exchange was down 0.2% at $131.25 a tonne, as of 0702 GMT, after earlier
touching a fresh three-week high of $132.40.
On the Shanghai Futures Exchange, the most-traded rebar rose 0.5% and hot-rolled coil gained 0.6%.
Both hit their highest since June earlier in the day.
"Data shows steel and iron ore inventories at China's mills
are sliding, with China's construction period traditionally
running hot from March through to June," broker SP Angel's
analysts said in a note.
Chinese steelmakers will need to lift their iron ore replenishment volumes this month to feed blast furnaces that have been brought back online following maintenance shutdown, Mysteel consultancy said. Declining iron ore portside inventory in China, which hit a four-week low of 138.6 million tonnes last week, based on SteelHome consultancy data , added to the market optimism, analysts said.
However, traders exercised caution as Chinese regulators may
take steps to curb iron ore prices, having warned against
excessive price speculation and hoarding.
Other Dalian steelmaking inputs fell, with coking coal and coke down 1.2% and 1.9%, respectively.
Shanghai wire rod edged up 0.1%, while Shanghai
stainless steel added 0.8%.
(Reporting by Enrico Dela Cruz in Manila; Editing by Rashmi
Aich and Subhranshu Sahu)