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Brazil's Iron Ore Export Record Marks A Comeback And Deepens China Exposure
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points
Brazil's iron ore exports climbed to 416.4 million metric tons in 2025, official trade data show. Because Brazil and Australia anchor seaborne supply, swings in Brazilian volumes reverberate globally.
The total beat the previous annual record from 2018, when exports were just under 390 million tons. After the Brumadinho tailings-dam disaster, tighter safety rules and inspections constrained output.
The 2025 rebound showed up in monthly flows: October and December shipments each topped 40 million tons. July reached 41.1 million tons, surpassing the prior monthly record of 39.5 million set in December 2015.
Vale, Brazil 's flagship miner, powered the recovery. It reported 94.4 million tons of iron ore output in July–September, its biggest quarterly volume since 2018, and maintained 2025 production guidance at 325–335 million tons.
In the same quarter, Vale said realized prices for iron ore fines averaged $94.4 per ton. China remained the decisive buyer.
Steel strong Brazil exports rise
In early January trading, the most-traded Dalian futures contract was around 806 yuan per ton and Singapore benchmarks hovered near $106–$107 per ton, both around five-month highs. This strength came even as China's November steel production fell 10.9% year on year.
Imports stayed elevated: November arrivals were 110.54 million tons, and annual imports were projected to surpass 2024's record 1.24 billion tons, aided by stock rebuilding, competitive seaborne pricing, and state-led stimulus programs.
For Brazil, the boom is a macro buffer. The government said total 2025 exports reached about $349 billion, aided by record iron ore volumes and 98 million tons of crude oil.
The trade-off is concentration risk: China accounts for roughly 30% of Brazilian exports, making this record run sensitive to Beijing's next policy turn. Market chatter on X largely echoed the official figures and Vale guidance.
Brazil exported 416.4 million metric tons of iron ore in 2025, up 7.1% from 2024 and the first time above 400 million.
Shipments surged late in the year: October and December each exceeded 40 million tons, and July set a monthly record at 41.1 million.
Prices firmed despite weaker Chinese steel output, as restocking and policy support kept import demand strong.
Brazil's iron ore exports climbed to 416.4 million metric tons in 2025, official trade data show. Because Brazil and Australia anchor seaborne supply, swings in Brazilian volumes reverberate globally.
The total beat the previous annual record from 2018, when exports were just under 390 million tons. After the Brumadinho tailings-dam disaster, tighter safety rules and inspections constrained output.
The 2025 rebound showed up in monthly flows: October and December shipments each topped 40 million tons. July reached 41.1 million tons, surpassing the prior monthly record of 39.5 million set in December 2015.
Vale, Brazil 's flagship miner, powered the recovery. It reported 94.4 million tons of iron ore output in July–September, its biggest quarterly volume since 2018, and maintained 2025 production guidance at 325–335 million tons.
In the same quarter, Vale said realized prices for iron ore fines averaged $94.4 per ton. China remained the decisive buyer.
Steel strong Brazil exports rise
In early January trading, the most-traded Dalian futures contract was around 806 yuan per ton and Singapore benchmarks hovered near $106–$107 per ton, both around five-month highs. This strength came even as China's November steel production fell 10.9% year on year.
Imports stayed elevated: November arrivals were 110.54 million tons, and annual imports were projected to surpass 2024's record 1.24 billion tons, aided by stock rebuilding, competitive seaborne pricing, and state-led stimulus programs.
For Brazil, the boom is a macro buffer. The government said total 2025 exports reached about $349 billion, aided by record iron ore volumes and 98 million tons of crude oil.
The trade-off is concentration risk: China accounts for roughly 30% of Brazilian exports, making this record run sensitive to Beijing's next policy turn. Market chatter on X largely echoed the official figures and Vale guidance.
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