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Iron ore price falls again as Chinese stockpiles reverse downward trend

Iron ore price falls again as Chinese stockpiles reverse downward trend

Tianjin sunset

The benchmark CFR import price of 62% iron ore fines at China’s Tianjin fell for the third straight session on Monday.

The 1.1% decline to $151.90 came despite news that Cyclone Rusty had closed major Western Australian ports, servicing more than half of the seaborne iron trade.

Iron ore is correcting following a rally that sent the steelmaking ingredient to 16-month highs last week.

Iron ore was also affected by a reversing of the recent trend of declining stockpiles at the China’s ports. The country is responsible for consuming almost two-thirds of the globe’s iron ore.

Inventories climbed 2.8% this week, the first time this year, to just shy 69 million tonnes. Stockpiles are still significantly down from highs above 100 million tonnes a year ago.

The pullback may turn out to be shortlived.

According to Bloomberg domestic Chinese iron ore prices exceeded the cost of imported cargoes by 50c – the first time this has happened in over two months – which may boost demand for Australian and Brazilian ore.

Image of Tianjin sunset by arkiben

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