Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Iron Ore's Quiet Grind Higher Tests China's“Restock Without A Boom” Trade


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • The 62% Fe CFR China benchmark inched higher last week, but rising port inventories are still the main ceiling.
  • Dalian kept climbing while offshore pricing was mixed, underscoring benchmark gaps and uneven sentiment.
  • Steel mill margins look better, but policy remains steady rather than stimulative.

    Iron ore is moving higher in slow motion. The bid is coming less from a dramatic China rebound and more from a familiar mix: improving steel margins, selective tightness in key grades, and a restocking narrative that is still running ahead of clear end-demand acceleration.

    The latest widely referenced 62% Fe CFR China benchmark print linked to TSI sits at $106.92 a ton, up from $106.10 a week earlier.

    In Singapore paper, an SGX IODEX proxy hovered near $107.20, with TradingView showing roughly 5.87k contracts traded at the time of capture. The message is firm pricing, but no breakout.



    Overnight, China's onshore mood stayed constructive. The most-traded Dalian iron ore contract was reported around 779 yuan a ton, up about 0.26%, extending a fifth straight session of gains. Offshore, the picture looked more mixed.

    A Reuters snapshot placed an SGX“benchmark January” level near $104.3 at the same time, a reminder that different benchmarks can tell different stories on the same morning.

    Fundamentals are pulling in opposite directions. On one side, analysts at Everbright Futures pointed to recovering steel mill profitability, with some mills resuming production.

    On the other, inventories are rising. One widely followed estimate put port stocks around 145.5 million tons, while a separate survey tracked 162.26 million tons across 47 ports.

    That inventory build is the market's reality check, because it limits how far price can run unless steel output and real consumption follow. There is also a grade-specific twist.

    Galaxy Futures described a structural shortage of Pilbara Blend fines, a key medium-grade staple. Spot commentary placed PB fines transactions around 790–795 yuan in Shandong.

    Trading activity remains heavy. A daily report cited 250,273 lots of iron ore futures volume and about 19.49 billion yuan in turnover.

    Technically, the trend is constructive but not stretched. The daily setup implies consolidation with RSI near 60, while the four-hour RSI around 63–64 suggests momentum cooling. Resistance clusters around $107.2–$107.5, then near $107.9.

    Support sits in the mid-$106s, then $105–$105.5. For now, the market is rewarding discipline over grand narratives, and waiting for a catalyst that policy is not providing after China left loan prime rates unchanged again.

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  • The Rio Times

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