China's U.S. soybean imports face delays as hurricanes
hit crop quality
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[October 04, 2017]
By Naveen Thukral
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - China's soybean
imports from the United States are likely to be delayed by at least two
weeks as suppliers struggle to find high-quality beans following crop
damage from hurricanes, two trade sources with knowledge of the matter
said.
Shipment delays could result in tight supplies at the end of October and
early November, they warned, driving up soymeal and soyoil prices in the
world's biggest importer of soybeans.
"Exporters are asking Chinese buyers to lower the quality specification,
but they are not agreeing," said one Singapore-based trader at an
international trading company with oilseed processing facilities in
China. The trader declined to be identified because he is not authorized
to speak to the media.
China, which buys about 65 percent of soybeans traded worldwide, has
been snapping up U.S. soybean cargoes in recent weeks, taking advantage
of a nearly 10 percent decline in prices since mid-July.
But early harvested soybeans, produced near the Mississippi Delta,
suffered damage from hurricanes last month, making it difficult for
exporters to meet quality specifications agreed with Chinese buyers, the
trade sources said.
GRAPHIC: China soybean imports delayed by U.S. quality concerns: http://reut.rs/2yn8WJt
The poor bean quality is causing delays at U.S. Gulf terminals, with
waiting times for ships rising to 10-12 days from the usual five days at
this time of the year, the traders said.
Low water levels in the Mississippi river due to dry weather could add
to delays in shipping crops as the harvest gathers momentum.
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An employee picks out bad beans from a pile of soybeans at a
supermarket in Wuhan, Hubei province April 14, 2014.
REUTERS/Stringer
Back-ups at aging locks have slowed navigation on the Mississippi and its
tributaries and driven the cost of hauling Midwestern crops to Gulf Coast
terminals to near-record highs.
This has left U.S. farmers struggling to find room to store their just-harvested
corn and soybeans while grain storage on the river's banks is filling up.
"Some Chinese buyers are trying to book cargoes from U.S. Pacific Northwest (PNW)
ports," said a trader at a state-owned trading company in China, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
"We think this will be a temporary issue - some tightness in supplies toward the
end of October and early November. It will support meal and oil values."
The Pacific Northwest is typically an export hub for wheat, not soybeans.
The trader said China was amply supplied with beans as of now, following record
purchases from Brazil in the past few months.
China imported 8.45 million tonnes of soybeans in August, according to customs
data, a record for the month, as improving processing margins boosted demand.
GRAPHIC: China soybean imports by month: http://reut.rs/2j958og
The August import figure was up 10.2 percent from last year's 7.67 million
tonnes, but down 16.2 percent from 10.08 million tonnes in July, according to
figures from the General Administration of Customs of China.
(Reporting by Naveen Thukral; Editing by Sonali Paul)
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