Iron Ore Monthly Price - Baht per Dry Metric Ton

Data as of March 2026

Range
Apr 2021 - Mar 2026: -22.629 (-40.15%)
Chart

Description: Iron ore (any origin) fines, spot price, c.f.r. China, 62% Fe beginning December 2008; previously 63.5%

Unit: Baht per Dry Metric Ton



Source: Thomson Reuters Datastream, World Bank.

See also: Mineral production statistics

See also: Top commodity suppliers

See also: Commodities glossary - Definitions of terms used in commodity trading

Overview

Iron ore is the principal raw material used to make steel, and its market price is commonly quoted for a standardized grade rather than for every physical variety. The most widely tracked benchmark is iron ore with 62% iron content, delivered cost and freight to Tianjin, quoted in US dollars per dry metric ton. This benchmark reflects the quality adjustments that matter in steelmaking, since higher-grade ore generally requires less processing and can improve furnace efficiency. Iron ore is traded in several physical forms, including fines, lumps, pellets, and concentrates, each with different handling and metallurgical characteristics.

The commodity is central to construction, infrastructure, machinery, transport equipment, and manufactured goods because steel is the dominant end use. Demand is therefore tied to industrial activity and the replacement of aging capital stock. Iron ore also has a strong link to the economics of blast furnace steelmaking, where ore quality, impurity content, and sintering behavior affect operating costs. Because it is a bulk commodity with significant transport costs, location and logistics are important parts of pricing.

Supply Drivers

Iron ore supply is shaped by geology, mine development cycles, beneficiation requirements, and transport infrastructure. Major producing regions include Australia, Brazil, China, India, and parts of Africa and North America, with large-scale output concentrated where high-tonnage deposits can be mined efficiently and moved by rail or port. The most competitive supply often comes from long-life open-pit operations with favorable stripping ratios and access to deepwater export terminals. Ore quality matters because lower-grade material may require crushing, washing, or concentration before it can be sold into seaborne markets.

Production is constrained by long lead times for mine development, rail links, ports, and processing plants. Weather can disrupt supply through flooding, cyclones, or seasonal rainfall that affects mining and shipping. In some regions, water availability is also a limiting factor for beneficiation. Iron ore is less exposed to biological risk than agricultural commodities, but operational interruptions, labor constraints, and infrastructure bottlenecks can still affect availability. Because steel mills require consistent feedstock, differences in moisture, impurity content, and lump-to-fines ratios can influence realized supply even when headline tonnage is stable.

Demand Drivers

Demand for iron ore is driven primarily by steel production, which in turn reflects construction, infrastructure, manufacturing, shipbuilding, automotive output, and machinery investment. The strongest structural demand comes from economies with large fixed-asset investment needs and ongoing urbanization, since steel is used in buildings, bridges, railways, pipelines, and industrial equipment. Replacement demand also matters because steel is durable, but infrastructure and capital stock eventually require renewal.

Substitution occurs mainly through changes in steelmaking routes rather than direct material replacement. Blast furnace-basic oxygen furnace production relies heavily on iron ore and metallurgical coal, while electric arc furnace production uses more scrap steel and less ore. The balance between these routes affects ore demand over long periods. Pelletized and higher-grade ores can gain preference when mills seek better furnace productivity or lower emissions intensity, while lower-grade ores may be discounted because they require more processing. Seasonal patterns are less pronounced than in agricultural markets, but construction cycles, winter weather in some consuming regions, and maintenance shutdowns at steel mills can influence short-term consumption.

Macro and Financial Drivers

Iron ore prices are sensitive to broad industrial activity, especially in economies where steel output is tied to fixed investment and manufacturing cycles. Because the commodity is priced in US dollars, exchange-rate movements affect purchasing power for non-dollar buyers and can influence import demand. Higher interest rates can weigh on construction and durable-goods activity by raising financing costs, while lower rates can support steel-intensive investment. As a bulk physical commodity, iron ore also reflects freight costs, port congestion, and storage constraints, which can create regional price differences and shape the benchmark relationship between seaborne supply and inland demand.

Unlike precious metals, iron ore is not typically used as a financial store of value. Its price behavior is more closely linked to industrial margins, steel output, and inventory management. When supply is abundant relative to near-term mill demand, storage and shipping economics can encourage contango; when mills need prompt delivery and inventories are tight, nearby prices can strengthen relative to deferred prices.

MonthPriceChange
Apr 202156.36-
May 202165.0215.37%
Jun 202167.413.68%
Jul 202169.943.74%
Aug 202153.66-23.28%
Sep 202141.28-23.07%
Oct 202141.15-0.31%
Nov 202131.82-22.68%
Dec 202139.3123.55%
Jan 202244.0512.06%
Feb 202246.716.04%
Mar 202250.578.24%
Apr 202251.151.16%
May 202245.18-11.67%
Jun 202245.701.15%
Jul 202239.48-13.61%
Aug 202239.05-1.08%
Sep 202236.99-5.29%
Oct 202235.10-5.10%
Nov 202234.06-2.98%
Dec 202238.9714.43%
Jan 202340.634.27%
Feb 202343.386.76%
Mar 202344.322.15%
Apr 202340.25-9.18%
May 202335.99-10.58%
Jun 202339.6010.04%
Jul 202339.56-0.10%
Aug 202338.62-2.38%
Sep 202343.4112.40%
Oct 202343.410.01%
Nov 202346.527.15%
Dec 202348.133.48%
Jan 202447.81-0.67%
Feb 202444.61-6.70%
Mar 202439.47-11.51%
Apr 202441.485.08%
May 202443.565.01%
Jun 202439.44-9.45%
Jul 202438.75-1.75%
Aug 202434.72-10.38%
Sep 202430.98-10.79%
Oct 202433.829.16%
Nov 202434.662.50%
Dec 202434.950.84%
Jan 202534.09-2.46%
Feb 202535.504.12%
Mar 202533.86-4.63%
Apr 202532.81-3.07%
May 202531.96-2.61%
Jun 202530.11-5.79%
Jul 202531.554.79%
Aug 202532.372.59%
Sep 202533.042.07%
Oct 202533.702.00%
Nov 202533.22-1.41%
Dec 202533.02-0.62%
Jan 202633.060.12%
Feb 202630.91-6.48%
Mar 202633.739.12%

Top Companies

Companhia Vale Do Rio Doce
Website: http://www.vale.com/
Location: Rio De Janerio, Brazil
Estimated Production: 301.7 million tonnes per year

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