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Iron Ore-Trading limited due to China holiday; may keep gains next wk

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Fri Jun 22, 2012 2:58am EDT

SINGAPORE, June 22 (Reuters) - Physical trading in the spot
iron ore market was limited on Friday with a public holiday in
top importer China, a day after the benchmark price rose for a
10th straight session in its longest upward streak in seven
months.
    Expectations that crude steel output in China will sustain
demand for iron ore have encouraged traders to snap up cargoes
in the last few days, lifting prices to their highest in nearly
six weeks.
    Benchmark 62-percent grade iron ore .IO62-CNI=SI rose 0.4
percent to $137.40 a tonne on Thursday, according to Steel
Index, its priciest since May 11. 
    That marked its 10th straight day of gains, its longest run
since mid-November, when the price of steel's raw material
climbed for 14 days in a row.
    But activity slowed sharply on Friday, with the Chinese away
for a long holiday weekend.
    "It's very quiet. I can hear the flies," said a Hong
Kong-based trader.
    After the recent rally, prices could start next week steady,
although the buying interest may persist and push prices further
up, he said.
    China's daily crude steel output stayed near record levels
at around 2 million tonnes in the first 10 days of June, as
large mills increased production, data from the China Iron and
Steel Association showed on Wednesday. 
        
  Iron ore indexes 
                                                                                                
                                    Last    Change   Pct Change
  PLATTS 62 PCT INDEX             139.25     +0.00        +0.00
  THE STEEL INDEX 62 PCT INDEX     137.4     +0.60        +0.44
  METAL BULLETIN INDEX            138.18     +0.13        +0.09
  Index in dollars/tonne, show close for the previous trading day
 
 (Reporting by Manolo Serapio Jr.; Editing by Joseph Radford)
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