China iron ore futures drop on Tangshan curbs, steel resilient amid firm demand

Chinese iron ore futures dropped more than 6% on Monday after top steelmaking city Tangshan pledged to cut emissions by 50% during the heavy pollution period and punish those who fail to implement production curbs.
The most-active iron ore on the Dalian Commodity Exchange , for May delivery, slumped as much as 6.3% to 1,005 yuan ($154.55) a tonne, the lowest since Feb. 8. The contract ended down 3.5% to 1,035 yuan a tonne.
Prices for other steelmaking ingredients also slumped on concerns of further output controls.
Dalian coking coal futures dived 3.0% to 1,486 yuan a tonne.
Coke futures were down 3.2% to 2,226 yuan at close, after hitting as low as 2,204 yuan a tonne, the lowest since Nov.5, 2020.
Steel futures on the Shanghai Futures Exchange, however, closed higher.
China’s property and infrastructure investment surged 38.3% and 36.6% in the first two months, respectively, the statistics bureau said.
Industrial output in the world’s second-largest economy also beat market expectations in the Jan-Feb period helped with brisk recovery in the manufacturing sector.
Construction rebar on the Shanghai bourse inched up 0.6% to 4,787 yuan per tonne.
Hot rolled coil, used in cars and home appliances, gained 1.1% at 5,068 yuan a tonne.
Stainless steel futures slipped 0.1% to 14,060 yuan a tonne.
FUNDAMENTALS
* Portside inventories of iron ore in China gained by 1.4 million tonnes to 130.9 million tonnes as of Mar.12 from the week earlier, data compiled by SteelHome showed.
* China’s crude steel output rose 12.9% in Jan-Feb on an annual basis, as mills increased production in expectation of more demand from the construction and manufacturing sectors.
* China’s second biggest steelmaker HBIS Group vowed to bring its carbon emissions to a peak in 2022.
Source: Reuters (Reporting by Min Zhang and Dominique Patton; editing by Uttaresh.V)