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Slow buying activity stalls iron ore as Shanghai rebar slips further

Published 31/03/2016, 01:48 pm
© Reuters.  Slow buying activity stalls iron ore as Shanghai rebar slips further
TISC
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* Dalian iron ore futures slip, Singapore futures steady

* Spot iron ore has fallen 16 pct from 2016 high

By Manolo Serapio Jr

MANILA, March 31 (Reuters) - Iron ore futures in China slipped on Thursday, a day after spot prices dropped to a two-week low amid slower buying interest among Chinese steel producers.

Spot iron ore has fallen 16 percent from this year's high following a rally that many had doubted would last as the market remained oversupplied.

"The buying activity was mainly from traders who kept very low inventory in the last few months and had been restocking with expectation that steel demand would come back strong in the next few months," said an iron ore trader in Shanghai.

Iron ore for immediate delivery to China's Tianjin port .IO62-CNI=SI slid 2.7 percent to $53.20 a tonne on Wednesday, the lowest since March 16, according to The Steel Index.

The spot benchmark touched a nearly nine-month high of $63.30 a tonne on March 8, a day after soaring by a record 19.5 percent due to a surge in Chinese steel prices.

Iron ore is currently up 8.8 percent for the month.

On the Dalian Commodity Exchange on Thursday, the September iron ore contract DCIOcv1 was down 0.8 percent at 376.50 yuan ($58.24) a tonne by 0237 GMT.

But the improved steel margins in the first quarter of the year compared to a year ago "may result in a possible turnaround" for Chinese producers in the current quarter, Argonaut Securities analyst Helen Lau said in a note.

"Supply-side reform will improve steel sector's fundamentals over the mid-to-long term," Lau said.

China said in January it plans to cut its crude steel production capacity by 100-150 million tonnes. rebar on the Shanghai Futures Exchange SRBcv1 slipped 0.5 percent to 2,108 yuan a tonne, pulling back further from a nine-month peak of 2,240 yuan reached on March 23.

Blaming high costs and competition from cheap Chinese imports, India's Tata Steel TISC.NS has put its British operations up for sale, leaving thousands of jobs at risk. = 6.4642 Chinese yuan)

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