After sorghum spat, U.S.-China trade fears halt soybean
imports
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[April 25, 2018]
By Naveen Thukral and Dominique Patton
SINGAPORE/BEIJING (Reuters) - China's
purchases of U.S. soybeans have come to a grinding halt, trade and
industry sources say, as fears of further action by Beijing to curb
imports of U.S. crops following last week's anti-dumping move on sorghum
rattles the agriculture industry.
Buyers from China, which takes 60 percent of soybeans traded worldwide,
have not signed any new deals to take U.S. beans in the last two weeks,
according to a Reuters review of data published by the United States
Department of Agriculture (USDA).
At stake are 3 million tonnes of soybeans - estimated worth about $1.3
billion - for which deals have been signed but cargoes have yet to leave
U.S. ports, traders say. Soybeans, crushed to make cooking oil and
protein-rich animal feed ingredient soymeal, were the biggest U.S.
agriculture export to China last year at a value of $12.3 billion,
according to the USDA.
Several ships carrying U.S. sorghum originally bound for China have
changed course since Beijing imposed hefty anti-dumping deposits on U.S.
imports as trade tensions grow between the world's top two economies.
"After China's action on U.S. sorghum, no one is willing to take the
risk of importing beans," said one Singapore-based trader at an
international company which owns soybean processing facilities in China.
"As a result the spread between Brazilian and U.S. prices has risen to a
level which we have not seen in recent years," he said, declining to be
identified because he was not authorized to speak to media.
'WOULDN'T DARE BUY U.S. BEANS'
China's imports of U.S. soybeans fell 27 percent in March compared with
the same month a year earlier, customs data showed on Tuesday, while
purchases from Brazil jumped by a third.
"We are now buying Brazilian, Canadian and some Argentina beans," said a
person familiar with soybean purchasing at a large crusher in China who
was not allowed to be identified in media. "We are a state-owned
company, we wouldn't dare to buy U.S. beans."
He added that crushers are closely watching talks expected to be held
next week between the Chinese and U.S. governments that may decide
whether tariffs will be imposed or not.
To be sure, the decline in U.S. bean exports to China is also partly due
to seasonal factors. Freshly harvested South American soybeans typically
dominate the world trade in the first half of the calendar year,
followed by the United States from September onwards.
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A man displays imported soybeans at a port in Nantong, Jiangsu
province, China April 9, 2018. Picture taken April 9, 2018.
REUTERS/Stringer
The United States has also been losing market share in China due to poor quality
of crop harvested at the end of last year following unseasonal rains and
hurricanes.
"For China, soybeans supplies are food security," said J.Y. Chow, food and
agriculture expert at Mizuho Bank in Singapore. "It is going to more of
posturing since this is South American supply season and I think there will be
pressure to sort it out by July when importers start signing deals for U.S.
soybeans."
BRAZIL BONANZA
Red-hot demand for Brazilian beans has driven up prices of South American
cargoes, slicing into profits at processing companies in China.
A trader at one international firm in Beijing said Chinese buyers bought more
than 40 cargoes of Brazilian beans last week, much higher than a more typical
weekly level of 20 to 30. He said crushers as well as large trading companies
were seeking Brazilian beans. The trader was not willing to be quoted as he was
not authorized to speak to media.
Brazilian soybeans were quoted at $467 a tonne, including cost and freight, to
China for June-July shipment, compared with U.S. cargoes priced around $435 a
tonne, according to traders in China and Singapore. The usual price spread is
around $10 a tonne.
(Graphic - U.S. soybean shipments to China trade at widening discount to Brazil
amid trade spat: https://reut.rs/2JqZ9n7)
Brazilian bean prices are rising despite the country estimated by the USDA to
harvest a record crop of 115 million tonnes this year.
The impact on bean processing margins is already showing up in data. Crushers in
China's eastern province of Shandong, the hub of soybean processing, are now
making a profit of just about 21 yuan a tonne <JCI-SBMG-SHDNI> compared with 263
yuan on April 10 - the highest margin since November.
(Graphic - China soy crush margins slump as soybean prices from Brazil climb:
https://reut.rs/2Ff6sM7)
(Reporting by Naveen Thukral in SINGAPORE and Dominique Patton in BEIJING;
Additional reporting by Hallie Gu in BEIJING; Editing by Kenneth Maxwell)
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