Fortescue share price closes higher after China’s record iron ore imports — what to watch next
14 January 2026
1 min read

Fortescue share price closes higher after China’s record iron ore imports — what to watch next

Sydney, Jan 14, 2026, 17:32 AEDT — The market has closed.

  • Fortescue shares edged up 0.35% to close at A$22.65, driven by cues tied to China.
  • China’s iron ore imports hit a monthly record in December, but an analyst warned that rising supply in 2026 could pressure prices.
  • Fortescue’s December-quarter production report, due Jan. 22, is the next key catalyst.

Fortescue Ltd (FMG.AX) shares edged up 0.35%, closing at A$22.65 Wednesday. The stock fluctuated between A$22.42 and A$22.88 during the session, with investors gearing up for new China-related developments ahead. (Investing)

China’s steel exports hit a record 11.3 million metric tons in December, driven by shippers rushing to beat a 2026 export-licence rule. At the same time, iron ore imports jumped 8.2% from November, reaching 119.65 million tons—a monthly peak, according to customs data. Stronger steel margins—meaning higher mill profits—drew in more ore. But the supply side is set to weigh on prices this year: global iron ore output is expected to rise 2.5% in 2026, said Bai Xin, an analyst at Horizon Insights. (Reuters)

For Fortescue, this is crucial. The company is closely tied to iron ore prices and the steel cycle in China. Once discussions turn to inventories and mill profits, miners’ cash flow and dividends inevitably come into focus.

Iron ore futures showed a mixed picture in recent trading. The May contract in Dalian hovered near 823.5 yuan per tonne, while the benchmark February contract in Singapore slipped slightly to about $108.9 a ton. (Business Recorder)

BHP Group and Rio Tinto are riding the same wave, while Brazil’s Vale links directly to the same end-market in China. Iron ore shifts tend to ripple across the sector in unison, especially as traders debate whether steel demand is genuinely strong or merely accelerated.

Price talks now face an added complication. China Mineral Resources Group, a state-backed entity created to centralise China’s iron ore imports, is taking a harder line with miners like Fortescue, BHP and Vale, the Financial Times revealed. (Financial Times)

Investors heading into Thursday’s session will be eyeing China’s data to see if miners can maintain their momentum or if concerns over weaker construction demand and growing supply take hold again. Currency shifts also play a subtle role: a stronger Australian dollar usually eats into miners’ U.S.-dollar earnings when converted.

Fortescue’s December-quarter production figures land Jan. 22, with first-half results due Feb. 25. These reports will shape forecasts around shipments, costs, and potential shifts in guidance. (Investor Centre)

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