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UPDATE 1-Iron ore dips as China battles fresh COVID-19 outbreak

Published 22/01/2021, 06:44 pm

* Dalian iron ore slips 0.5%, down 0.3% this week

* SGX iron ore set for first weekly loss in three (Updates prices, adds graphics)

By Enrico Dela Cruz

MANILA, Jan 22 (Reuters) - Iron ore futures fell on Friday as near-term demand prospects darkened in top steel producer China, which is battling its worst COVID-19 outbreak since March, but concerns over possible supply disruptions in key exporter Australia lent some support.

Iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange DCIOcv1 ended daytime trading 0.5% lower at 1,046.50 yuan ($161.71) a tonne, surrendering early gains.

The steelmaking raw material lost 1% to $165.91 a tonne on the Singapore Exchange SZZFG1 by 0707 GMT.

In a week that saw iron ore futures move sideways, the Dalian benchmark dropped 0.3%, while the Singapore front-month contract was on track for its first weekly loss of this year.

Moves this week highlighted the lack of conviction in a market worried about weakening steel margins and COVID-19 restrictions in China, while anticipating improved steel demand after the Lunar New Year holidays next month.

"While we still feel iron ore benchmarks are in a state of disequilibrium with global supply-demand fundamentals, paper markets are likely evaluating the impact of the recent COVID-19 outbreak in Hebei province on China's steel production and iron ore consumption," said Atilla Widnell, managing director at Navigate Commodities in Singapore.

Spot iron ore in China stayed firm above $170 a tonne, SteelHome consultancy data showed. SH-CCN-IRNOR62

"We expect that markedly lower Australian iron ore shipments over the past three weeks and the tropical cyclone fast-approaching Port Hedland will continue to underpin iron ore prices in the near term," Widnell said.

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Indicating weak demand, total inventories of finished steel products, including construction steel rebar and hot-rolled coil, held by 184 Chinese mills monitored regularly by Mysteel consultancy grew 3.3% over Jan. 14-20 to 5.95 million tonnes.

Rebar on the Shanghai Futures Exchange SRBcv1 fell 0.6%, while hot-rolled coil SHHCcv1 dipped 0.8%. Stainless steel SHSScv1 slumped 2.5%.

Dalian coking coal DJMcv1 slumped 1% but coke DCJcv1 climbed 0.8%.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ China steel inventories

https://tmsnrt.rs/39XzZv4 China ferrous materials futures' YTD performance

https://tmsnrt.rs/3p7x9u3

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