Is China buying U.S. soy? Washington shutdown keeps
traders guessing
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[December 29, 2018]
By Julie Ingwersen
CHICAGO (Reuters) - Commodity traders are
in the dark because of the partial U.S. government shutdown, unable to
see daily and weekly reports of agricultural exports to obtain clues as
to whether China is following through with promises to buy grain and soy
amid the ongoing trade war.
Traders have been anxiously awaiting proof from the U.S. Department of
Agriculture that China is ramping up purchases of grains and soy from
U.S. farmers, who are preparing their spring planting and trying to
secure financing for seeds, fertilizer and land rents.
Now, trade experts and grain analysts warn the suspension of the reports
is clouding the marketplace and potentially giving an advantage to big
grain companies directly involved in the export trade. The government
shut down partially at midnight on Dec. 21.
"We're watching sales to China like a hawk," said Ted Seifried, vice
president and chief ag market strategist for the Zaner Group.
Beijing resumed buying U.S. cargoes earlier this month, after the two
countries agreed on Dec. 1 to a trade war truce. But hefty tariffs on
U.S. cargoes remain in place, and there is uncertainty over how much the
top U.S. soybean customer will purchase.
The gap also gives the large commercial grain merchants - such as Archer
Daniels Midland Co <ADM.N>, Bunge Ltd <BG.N>, Cargill Inc [CARG.UL] and
Louis Dreyfus Corp [LOUDR.UL] - an advantage by allowing them to keep
their export deals with countries like China and Mexico out of the
public marketplace.
ADM and Cargill said on Friday they had no comment. The other two
companies could not immediately be reached for comment.
Rich Feltes, vice president for research with Chicago-based brokerage
R.J. O'Brien, said the absence of USDA export sales data can increase
the risk involved in trading agricultural markets, pushing speculators
to the side.
"It gives a little bit of unfair advantage to exporters who either are
or are not making sales, and can trade that information accordingly," he
said.
Along with its weekly export sales reports, the USDA has issued daily
announcements of grain and soybean sales over 100,000 tonnes since 1977.
The reporting system was launched in response to the purchase of
millions of tonnes of U.S. grain by the Soviet Union in 1972 in deals
that resulted in soaring U.S. grain and food prices
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Soy beans are seen in a field waiting to be harvested in Minooka,
Illinois, September 24, 2014. REUTERS/Jim Young
FARMERS AT RISK
University of Illinois agricultural economist Scott Irwin said the partial
shutdown could also deal a blow to farmers suffering from the U.S.-China
dispute, by delaying aid payments meant to help offset some of the losses for
crops hit by retaliatory Chinese tariffs in a trade war launched by U.S.
President Donald Trump.
"If you're talking about cash in the farmer's pocket, the longer this goes on,
the longer it's going to delay that program, which is really just getting ramped
up," Irwin said.
The shutdown entered its seventh day on Friday, and was on track to continue
into next week and possibly longer. It affects about 800,000 employees of the
Departments of Homeland Security, Justice, Agriculture, Commerce, and other
agencies.
If the shutdown persists, it also could jeopardize the release of a host of
hotly anticipated monthly and quarterly grain supply and demand reports.
The USDA on Friday reiterated that the shutdown, if it continues, would halt its
World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (WASDE) report and reports by its
National Agricultural Statistics Service, which tracks quarterly U.S. grain
stocks and U.S. winter wheat seedings.
Those reports, along with an annual summary of U.S. crop production, were
scheduled for release on Jan. 11.
In the reports, Feltes said analysts expected to see the USDA trim its estimates
of the average 2018 U.S. corn and soybean yields, imply strong feed usage of
corn in the first quarter, and shed light on how many acres of winter wheat
farmers were able to plant this past autumn, given excessive rains in many
areas.
"Those are all bullish influences that we are going to be denied confirmation
of," he said.
(Reporting by Julie Ingwersen in Chicago; Additional reporting by Tom Polansek,
P.J. Huffstutter and Michael Hirtzer in Chicago and Humeyra Pamuk in Washington;
Editing by Tracy Rucinski and Matthew Lewis)
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