Iron ore prices extend losses

By 0217 GMT, the most-traded iron ore contract on China’s Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE) slipped 0.81 percent to 797 yuan (USD115.85) a metric ton, losing 1.8percent so far this week. The benchmark May iron ore on the Singapore Exchange was 1.16percent lower at USD105.15 a ton as of 0107 GMT, recording a 2percent decline so far this week. Downward pressure from high portside stocks dominated trade, while the conflict between supply and demand remained muted, said analysts.

Iron ore inventory at 47 Chinese ports rose 0.5 percent week-on-week to 177.5 million tons by April 2, hovering near the record high of 179.47 million tons touched in mid-March, data from consultancy Mysteel showed.

Moreover, concerns that spot availability could increase if China’s state iron ore buyer and BHP make progress in negotiations over 2026 supply contract weighed on sentiment.

However, the downside was capped by signs of improving demand as some mills resumed production after equipment maintenance. The average daily hot metal output, a gauge of iron ore demand, climbed 2.7percent week-on-week to 2.37 million tons as of April 2, its highest since October 2025, per Mysteel data.