Iron ore losses deepen as China demand slumps, ample supply looms

Kitco Media
By Anonymous
Published:
Updated:
Reuters
 * 
 Dalian iron ore drops to weakest since Dec. 21
 

 * 
 SGX iron ore falls but stays above $100/tonne
 

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 China steel benchmarks, coking coal prices dip
 

 
 (Updates prices, SGX iron ore milestone)
 By Enrico Dela Cruz
 April 24 (Reuters) - Iron ore futures slumped to their
lowest in more than four months on Monday as weak steel demand
in China prompted a production slowdown, while latest reports
from major miners signalled ample supply of the steelmaking
ingredient.
 The most-traded September iron ore on China's Dalian
Commodity Exchange  ended daytime trade 3.1% lower at⧡.50 yuan ($104.69) a tonne. It earlier dropped to 715.50
yuan, its weakest since Dec. 21.
 On the Singapore Exchange, the benchmark May iron ore
  dropped as much as 4.9% to $102.80 a tonne, the lowest
since late November.
 Steel benchmarks on the Shanghai Futures Exchange also
dipped, with rebar  shedding 3.6% to its weakest since
November, while hot-rolled coil lost 3.7%
 "Despite the construction season underway (in China), steel
prices have continued to fall amid weak demand and rising
inventories," ANZ commodity strategists said in a note. 
 More than 40% of steel furnaces in Tangshan, China's largest
steel-producing city in Hebei province, have gone into
maintenance, reducing iron ore demand, they said.
 "There were promising signs of better production discipline
among Chinese rebar producers over the past week as mills began
reacting to highly negative margins," Atilla Widnell, managing
director at Navigate Commodities, said.
 Iron ore has also lost support from the supply side.
 Fortescue Metals Group Ltd  retained its full-year
shipment guidance despite a cyclone this month that disrupted
exports from Australia's iron ore hub.
 Rio Tinto   has reaffirmed its annual iron
ore shipments forecast after reporting a better-than-expectedϷ.4% jump in first-quarter shipments from Western Australia. 
 Brazilian miner Vale SA  , meanwhile, reported ai.8% year-on-year increase in first-quarter iron ore production,
while BHP Group Ltd reiterated its annual forecast for Western
Australian iron ore output.
 Wire rod  on the Shanghai exchange fell 1.6%, while
stainless steel  dropped 2.6%.
 Coking coal  and coke  on the Dalian
exchange dipped 1.2% and 2.2%, respectively. 
 

 (Reporting by Enrico Dela Cruz in Manila; Editing by Nivedita
Bhattacharjee and Sonia Cheema)
 ((enrico.delacruz@thomsonreuters.com))
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