Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Iron Ore At $105 Is About China-And About Everyone Else


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Iron ore is holding just above $105 a tonne this morning. That number matters far beyond the pits of Western Australia or Brazil's northern mine belts.

It is a shorthand for how confident the world feels about China's ability to build, consume and keep factories humming.

The headline story: futures climbed back to the $105–106 range after a week of tug-of-war trading.

Prices dipped when Chinese steel mills-squeezed by thin margins-pulled back on purchases, then rebounded on signs of a modest U.S.–China thaw and chatter about stricter enforcement of China's capacity rules for steel.

Rebar and hot-rolled coil were mixed last week but stabilized into Monday, giving ore a floor.



The story behind it supply is not the problem. Big miners (Rio Tinto, BHP, Fortescue and Brazil's Vale) report steady shipments, and China's September intake was among the strongest on record.

That combination-ample supply meeting hesitant demand-explains why rallies stall near $108–110 unless something changes on the steel side.

The market is waiting for clearer proof that construction and manufacturing orders in China are improving, not just policy headlines.

Why $105 is a fault line: on the daily chart, prices sit above the 50-day average with momentum tilting higher; on the four-hour view, buyers are defending a rising trendline.

Hold $105 and the path of least resistance is a grind higher; lose it and the market likely slips back to $103–104 where last week's lows formed. A clean break above $106.2 would force short-covering toward $108–110.

Why readers outside Brazil should care: Brazil is the world's second-largest exporter and Vale is a central taxpayer and employer.

When ore holds above $100, royalty receipts, port throughput and rail volumes stabilize, supporting fiscal coffers and local jobs.

When it slips, Brasília's numbers get tighter and capital spending plans across mining towns are the first to pause.

The risk and the reveal: today's bounce is real, but it rides on sentiment. If the U.S.–China goodwill cools or Chinese end-demand weakens again, ore will retreat quickly.

If Beijing's capacity enforcement sticks and order books improve, the market has the fuel to re-rate.

Iron ore at $105 is not a victory lap-it's the world's biggest consumer telling producers to keep the ore coming, but not to expect a boom just yet.

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The Rio Times

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