Iron ore prices to remain firm in Jul even as production curbs lower demand

Published: Jul 4, 2019 12:20
Production curbs are expected to lower demand for iron ore by 7.56 million mt in Jul

SHANGHAI, Jul 4 (SMM) – Prices of seaborne iron ore across Chinese markets are expected to remain at highs in July, despite intensifying production curbs at major steelmaking hubs that are set to dent demand.

Fundamentals will remain robust and offer support to prices, as port stocks are unlikely to pick up and as a recovery in profit margins will drive production at steel mills that are not under curbs.

The top steelmaking hub of Tangshan in late June required mills to deepen production curbs until the end of July, while another major hub of Wu’an ordered some sintering machines and blast furnaces to suspend in July. This is expected to lower demand for iron ore by 7.56 million mt in July.

This, together with recovered supplies from Australia and Brazil, impact iron ore prices. SMM data showed that iron ore deliveries leaving Australian ports picked up, and deliveries from Brazilian ports grew for a second straight week in the week ended June 29.

Those leaving Australian ports rose 1.81 million mt from the previous week to 15.93 million mt, and those departing Brazilian ports increased by 340,000 mt to 7.33 million mt.

Maintenance at Australian mines in July, however, is likely to limit the growth in supply, and keep stocks at Chinese port from a substantial rebound.

As of the end of June, iron ore stocks across 35 Chinese ports shrank 8.17 million mt from a month ago and 36.38 million mt from a year ago, to stand at 106.68 million mt, SMM data showed.

Daily average iron ore deliveries from those ports decreased by 47,000 mt month on month, but increased by 139,100 mt year on year, to 2.6 million mt.

Stocks of iron ore fines across Qingdao, Rizhao, Jingtang, Caofeidian, Tianjin, and Lianyungang ports as of the end of June dropped over 6 million mt, or 9% from a month ago, and 17.98 million mt, or some 21% from a year ago, SMM data showed.

In June, those six ports saw their stocks of MAC, Newman, Pilbara, Jimblebar fines shrink 6.9 million mt, or 9.1%, and stocks of lower-grade materials such as Yandi, Blended and Super Special fines decline 340,000 mt, or 4.3%.

As of the end of June, the MMi for iron ore with 62% Fe stood at $118.79/mt, up 12.9% from the end of May; while the price index for spot cargoes at ports gained 12% to 877 yuan/mt.  

Data Source Statement: Except for publicly available information, all other data are processed by SMM based on publicly available information, market communication, and relying on SMM's internal database model. They are for reference only and do not constitute decision-making recommendations.

For any inquiries or for more information, please contact: lemonzhao@smm.cn
For more information on how to access our research reports, please contact:service.en@smm.cn
Related News
Hunan Launches Second Round of Environmental Inspections, Affecting Lead-Zinc Mines
Jun 30, 2026 14:20
Hunan Launches Second Round of Environmental Inspections, Affecting Lead-Zinc Mines
Read More
Hunan Launches Second Round of Environmental Inspections, Affecting Lead-Zinc Mines
Hunan Launches Second Round of Environmental Inspections, Affecting Lead-Zinc Mines
Hunan Province has launched the second round of its provincial ecological and environmental protection inspection "look-back" campaign. The first batch of seven inspection teams has been fully deployed since June 13, 2026, covering the cities of Changsha, Zhuzhou, Yueyang, Shaoyang, Hengyang, Huaihua, and Zhangjiajie. According to market sources, some lead-zinc mines have suspended production as a result of the inspections. SMM will continue to monitor and assess the potential impact on zinc concentrate supply.
Jun 30, 2026 14:20
Australia Terminates Anti-Dumping Probe on South Korean, Vietnamese Galvanised Steel Sheets
Jun 23, 2026 16:31
Australia Terminates Anti-Dumping Probe on South Korean, Vietnamese Galvanised Steel Sheets
Read More
Australia Terminates Anti-Dumping Probe on South Korean, Vietnamese Galvanised Steel Sheets
Australia Terminates Anti-Dumping Probe on South Korean, Vietnamese Galvanised Steel Sheets
On June 19, 2026, the Australian Anti-Dumping Commission issued Notice No. 2026/088, terminating the anti-dumping investigation on galvanised sheet [Zinc Coated (Galvanised) Steel] imported from South Korea and Vietnam, following the withdrawal application submitted by the applicant BlueScope Steel Limited. Previously, on May 22, 2026, the Commission issued Notice No. 2026/071, initiating an anti-dumping investigation on galvanised sheet imported from South Korea and Vietnam, in response to an application filed by Australian domestic enterprise BlueScope Steel Limited.
Jun 23, 2026 16:31
Supply Gap Persists in Vietnamese Market, Spot Lead Traded at High Premiums
Jun 5, 2026 11:08
Supply Gap Persists in Vietnamese Market, Spot Lead Traded at High Premiums
Read More
Supply Gap Persists in Vietnamese Market, Spot Lead Traded at High Premiums
Supply Gap Persists in Vietnamese Market, Spot Lead Traded at High Premiums
[Ex-China Lead Market Dynamics] It was learned that the recent environmental protection inspections on secondary lead in the Vietnamese market had temporarily come to an end, and some lead smelters had gradually resumed production. However, in the face of the current primary lead supply gap, spot lead in the local market continued to maintain high premiums. According to the latest information, the CIF premium for Vietnamese lead ingots with Pb≥99.99% in June had reached $180/mt as a common transaction price, compared to around $165/mt in May.
Jun 5, 2026 11:08