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Iron-ore futures rise as miners face labour shortage in Australia

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Update time : 2022-01-25 17:51:54

Bigger rivals BHP Group and Rio Tinto have also warned of disruptions from labour shortages as Australia faces a surge of Omicron coronavirus variant cases.

Iron ore's most-traded May contract on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange ended the morning session 0.5% higher at 759.50 yuan ($119.99) a tonne, rising for a fifth straight day after overnight gains erased Monday's daytime losses.

On the Singapore Exchange, the most-active March contract was up 2.4% at $136.05 a tonne by 0416 GMT.

Fortescue, the world's fourth-biggest iron ore miner, posted a 2% rise in second-quarter shipments, but flagged pressures from strong demand for labour and resources, as well as supply chain constraints due to the pandemic.

"The release of Fortescue's production report should shed light on whether recent iron ore supply disruptions have been overcome," ANZ commodity strategists said in a note.

Analysts said supply concerns may boost support for iron ore, which has rebounded this month amid top steel producer China's stepped-up monetary easing efforts to shore up its slowing economy.

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