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Dalian iron-ore near 1-month low, limited impact from icy weather

30th January 2018

By: Reuters

  

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MANILA – Chinese iron-ore futures ticked higher, but kept near one-month lows on Tuesday, as ample supply of the steelmaking raw material countered transport disruptions caused by heavy snow in the country.

Rebar steel prices slipped, touching their lowest in nearly a week at one point.

Heavy snow has led to transport bottlenecks in China, snarling railroads and highways and cutting off critical supplies of some commodities such as thermal coal.

But supply of iron-ore appears unaffected for now.

"High iron-ore inventories, both at the ports and at steel mills, suggest the impact from such disruptions will be low and have little price impact," ANZ analysts said in a note.

The most-actively traded iron-ore contract for May delivery on the Dalian Commodity Exchange closed up 0.3% at 517.50 yuan ($82) a tonne. The contract touched 513.50 yuan intraday, not far above Monday's one-month trough of 511 yuan.

Stocks of imported iron-ore at China's ports stood at 153.13-million tonnes on Jan. 26, falling for the first time in 15 weeks, but still near a record 154.43-million tonnes from the previous week, according to data tracked by SteelHome consultancy.

At small- and medium-sized Chinese mills, iron-ore inventory rose 9.4% between Jan. 19 and Jan. 5, Morgan Stanley said.

The benchmark spot iron-ore price was little changed on Monday, standing at $74.33 a tonne, according to Metal Bulletin.

Steel inventory at Chinese traders has also recovered, reaching 3.97-million tonnes for construction product rebar as of Friday, more than a-million tonnes higher from an all-time low of 2.84-million tonnes in mid-December, SteelHome data showed.

"With better-than-expected macro data, industry started building up stock in preparation for the peak season after Chinese New Year," Morgan Stanley said in a note. The week-long Chinese holiday begins on Feb. 15.

The most-traded rebar on the Shanghai Futures Exchange closed 0.6% down at 3 921 yuan a tonne. Coke futures fell 1.4% to 2 012.50 yuan per tonne and coking coal was flat at 1 295 yuan.

Edited by Reuters

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