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Labrador Iron Ore Royalty Corp T.LIF

Alternate Symbol(s):  LIFZF

Labrador Iron Ore Royalty Corporation is a Canada-based investment company. The Company holds interests in the Iron Ore Company of Canada (IOC), which is a North American producer and exporter of iron ore pellets and high-grade concentrate. The Company, through its wholly owned subsidiary, Hollinger Hanna Limited (Hollinger-Hanna), holds an approximately 15.10% equity interest in IOC. It holds an approximately 15.10% equity interest in IOC and receives approximately 7% gross overriding royalty and a 10% per ton commission on all iron ore products produced, sold, and shipped by IOC. IOC operates mine, concentrator and pellet plant at Labrador City, Newfoundland, and Labrador. The IOC mines and produces iron ore pellets and concentrates at its facilities in Labrador City, Newfoundland, and Labrador. The Company holds mining leases and mining licenses covering approximately 18,200 hectares of land near Labrador City.


TSX:LIF - Post by User

Comment by pierrelebelon Mar 23, 2021 5:05pm
213 Views
Post# 32860401

RE:LIf Kind of harsh

RE:LIf Kind of harsh

Iron ore prices tumbled on Monday, dragged down by concerns over weak demand for the steelmaking ingredients, as markets eyed the possibility of further production cuts in the top steel-producing city of Tangshan.

China’s top steelmaking city said it will punish firms that either have not taken the steps spelled out under its emergency anti-pollution plan or have illegally discharged pollutants, following weeks of smog in northern China.

The country, which accounts for more than half of the world’s steel output, has also shut down numerous small and low-quality iron ore mines and will continue to raise its bar on ore quality to match its environmental standards.

 

According to Fastmarkets MB, benchmark 62% Fe fines imported into Northern China (CFR Qingdao) were changing hands for $157.01 a tonne, down 4.38% from the previous trade.

The most-traded May iron ore contract on China’s Dalian Commodity Exchange ended the daytime session 5.9% lower at 1,004.50 yuan ($154.35) a tonne.

On the Singapore Exchange, the front-month April contract was down 2% at $151.10/tonne by 0718 GMT.

Dalian coke tumbled 7.3% to 2,131 yuan per tonne while Dalian coking coal shed 3.9% to 1,547.50 yuan per tonne.

Iron ore price reached its highest level since September 2011 in mid-January, but has since declined 9.7%

“We think the next three years could be marked as ‘Supply-side reform 2.0’, during which time we should see accelerating policy changes limit production growth in the industry – this time due to tightening environmental regulations,” analysts at JP Morgan wrote in a note to Reuters.

link

 

 

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