* Sell-off threatens months-long speculative rally
* BarCap sees more downside, puts avg iron ore at $70/t in Q2
* China iron ore stocks rise again (Updating prices)
BEIJING, March 27 (Reuters) - Chinese steel and iron ore futures sank to their lowest in more than six weeks on Monday, extending a five-day losing streak as speculative investors continued their exodus amid mounting concerns about demand and growing inventories.
Iron ore had its biggest one-day drop since mid-December as stockpiles at major ports in China, the world's top steelmaker, rose for a second week, topping 132 million tonnes last week, the highest since at least 2004, according to SteelHome consultancy. SH-TOT-IRONINV
The most-active rebar contract on the Shanghai Futures Exchange SRBcv1 closed down 2.89 percent at 3,057 yuan ($444.57) per tonne.
During the session, it fell as far as 3,003 yuan, its lowest since Feb. 10 as funds and other speculative investors exited long positions and placed fresh bearish bets.
Iron ore on the Dalian Commodity Exchange DCIOcv1 plunged 5.26 percent to 550.0 yuan ($79.98) per tonne, having touched 541 yuan earlier, its weakest since Feb. 8.
"China's steel market is showing signs of price weakness and the move of (hot-rolled-coil) prices into a discount relative to domestic rebar prices is a sign of further weakness ahead," said Barclays (LON:BARC) Capital.
"We feel that there is further downside risk for the benchmark (iron ore) price."
The bank expects iron ore prices to average $70 per tonne in the second quarter, down from around $80 currently.
The latest sell-off threatens the months-long rally and was triggered by concerns about demand from the building sector after Beijing imposed fresh curbs on lending in real estate in China last week. week, rebar lost 5.5 percent and iron ore fell 7 percent, the biggest weekly drop for both contracts since December.
($1 = 6.8763 Chinese yuan)