Timothy Moore for AFR electronic 5.25am 04/07/25
Iron ore extended its rally with the price rising back above $US96 a tonne in Singapore trading, a three-month-high.
In a note, Goldman Sachs’ commodities analyst Aurelia Waltham said China iron ore consumption remains at a high level, propped up by resilient steel demand from the manufacturing sector and steel exports.
Still, Waltham said she thinks a ceiling is close.
“While strong demand can support the iron ore price in the $US95-100/t range in the near term, we believe that supply growth caps upside, making a price above $US100/t unsustainable.
“Australian shipments increased by 3 per cent year-over-year in June, alongside higher volumes from Brazil, Canada and South Africa. This has helped to offset supply disruption from Peru following port infrastructure damage.”
Waltham also said: “We forecast the iron ore price to decline to an average of $US90/t in Q4 2025, as strong seaborne supply is met by lower China steel production as steel exports decline. While steel export volumes appear to have held up in June, tariff-related headwinds are compounded by recent comments from the China Iron and Steel Association, calling for export restrictions on steel billet.”
Iron ore extended its rally with the price rising back above $US96 a tonne in Singapore trading, a three-month-high.
In a note, Goldman Sachs’ commodities analyst Aurelia Waltham said China iron ore consumption remains at a high level, propped up by resilient steel demand from the manufacturing sector and steel exports.
Still, Waltham said she thinks a ceiling is close.
“While strong demand can support the iron ore price in the $US95-100/t range in the near term, we believe that supply growth caps upside, making a price above $US100/t unsustainable.
“Australian shipments increased by 3 per cent year-over-year in June, alongside higher volumes from Brazil, Canada and South Africa. This has helped to offset supply disruption from Peru following port infrastructure damage.”
Waltham also said: “We forecast the iron ore price to decline to an average of $US90/t in Q4 2025, as strong seaborne supply is met by lower China steel production as steel exports decline. While steel export volumes appear to have held up in June, tariff-related headwinds are compounded by recent comments from the China Iron and Steel Association, calling for export restrictions on steel billet.”