Iron ore stockpiles drop at Chinese ports
Stockpiles of iron ore continued to drop at 25 major Chinese ports during the week ending Nov. 19, according to Xinhua's latest iron ore price report Tuesday, Xinhua reports.
Imported iron ore at the ports stood at 96.89 million tonnes last week, down 540,000 tonnes from the previous week, the report said.
The decrease was slightly higher than the 480,000 tonnes decrement recorded in the week ending Nov. 12.
The price index for 63.5-percent-grade iron ore imports remained flat at 123 points last week, while the index for 58-percent-grade imports stayed unchanged at 105 points, the report said.
Import prices of iron ore are less likely to go up in the short term as demand for steel is expected to shrink further during the cold weather. However, Xinhua analysts predicted the market would pick up along with an improving economy in the longer term.
China, the world's top iron ore consumer and buyer, imported 56.43 million tonnes of the raw material in October, down 13.2 percent month-on-month. The average import price dropped 9.45 percent from the previous month to 104.9 U.S. dollars per tonnes, according to General Administration of Customs data.