Home

Iron ore hits highest in a month on hopes China’s demand improving

Bloomberg Bloomberg
The steelmaking ingredient is above $US110 ($A163) a tonne after trading below that for most of June. 
Camera IconThe steelmaking ingredient is above $US110 ($A163) a tonne after trading below that for most of June.  Credit: John - stock.adobe.com

Iron ore touched its highest in nearly a month as traders bet on a modest improvement for China’s steel market.

Futures in Singapore rose the previous four trading days and are up more than 6 per cent this week due a tick-up in demand and hopes for a stimulus boost at a major Chinese political gathering - known as the Third Plenum.

The steelmaking ingredient is now solidly above $US110 ($A163) a tonne after trading below that threshold for most of June.

Iron ore has rebounded from below $US100 ($A148) a tonne in May, after the government unveiled a rescue package for the key property sector.

Get in front of tomorrow's news for FREE

Journalism for the curious Australian across politics, business, culture and opinion.

READ NOW

But real estate prospects are still murky and attention is focused on what policies emerge from the Third Plenum in mid-July, where China’s Communist Party elite will flesh out long-term goals.

Mills still have appetite for iron ore with their furnace run-rates at high levels and there has been a recent rebound in steel demand, Chaos Ternary Research Institute said a note.

Expectations for China’s economy are improving ahead of the July meeting, it added.

Futures in Singapore were little changed to $US113.45 ($A168.93) a tonne as at 11:35 am local time, after gaining as much as 0.4 per cent earlier. Dalian prices dipped slightly while steel futures were little changed in Shanghai.

Get the latest news from thewest.com.au in your inbox.

Sign up for our emails