Dalian iron ore hits one-week low, slow China steel demand weighs

MANILA, Mar 16: Dalian iron ore futures fell to a one-week low on Wednesday, pressured by slow steel demand in top market China that is likely to fuel more bearish bets on the steelmaking raw material. Spot iron ore prices are back to levels before last week’s record surge that many traders blamed on speculative buying, given the market’s still weak demand-supply fundamentals.  The most-traded May iron ore contract on the Dalian Commodity Exchange was down 1.3 percent at 414 yuan ($63.51) a tonne by 0259 GMT after falling as far as 410 yuan earlier. On the Shanghai Futures Exchange, rebar, a construction steel product, was up 0.7 percent at 1,997 yuan a tonne, but below last week’s eight-month peak of 2,138 yuan. “Now that everybody’s calmed down, we see there’s no major improvement on the physical demand side for steel,” said a Shanghai-based iron ore trader.  While Chinese steel demand is better now than in the past two months as warmer weather spurs more construction activity, “it’s not enough to keep steel prices high,” he said.  Some traders are keen on selling iron ore cargoes at below market levels as bids drop, he said. Iron ore for immediate delivery to China’s Tianjin port slumped 6.9 percent to $51.70 a tonne on Tuesday, according to The Steel Index (TSI). It was its steepest drop since July 2015. It brought the spot benchmark’s losses to 18.3 percent for the past five sessions, that came shortly after it soared by a record 19.5 percent on March 7. Commonwealth Bank of Australia believes iron ore will fall back to $40 per tonne.        “We continue to see surplus risks in iron ore markets, driven by slowing demand in China and expanding supply in seaborne markets as new projects ramp up,” the bank said in a note. (AGENCIES)