Iron ore buckles below $US100 as China’s plenum fails to inspire

Iron ore crumbled below $US100 ($A150.93) a tonne as a policy meeting in China failed to deliver major stimulus, while supplies stayed strong.

The steelmaking material slid as much as 3.5 per cent to touch $US99.85 ($A150.70) in Singapore, with futures on track for a third day of losses.

The outcome of the Third Plenum, a twice-a-decade conclave of Communist Party officials held last week, underwhelmed investors, with few steps to boost metals demand or fix the property crisis.

On the supply side, data from Brazil – the largest iron ore exporter after Australia – showed daily average shipments reached 1.62 million tonnes in the first 15 business days of July, a faster pace than in the full month a year ago. Last week, major miners reported record levels of production.

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