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		U.S. confirms light soy, wheat, pork sales to China before latest tariff 
		threats
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		 [August 09, 2019]  By 
		Karl Plume 
 CHICAGO (Reuters) - China bought small 
		amounts of U.S. soybeans, wheat, sorghum and pork last week ahead of the 
		latest escalation of trade tensions with Washington, according to U.S. 
		government data issued on Thursday, in what may be the last American 
		farm commodity sales to China for the foreseeable future.
 
 China's Ministry of Commerce said this week that purchases of U.S. 
		agricultural products by Chinese companies have been "suspended."
 
 With Chinese buying on hold, U.S. exporters will instead focus on 
		shipping orders made earlier this year when the two sides appeared 
		headed for a deal, a list that includes more than 4 million tonnes of 
		soybeans and nearly 103,500 tonnes of pork.
 
 
		
		 
		Tensions escalated after Washington branded Beijing a currency 
		manipulator and threatened to impose 10% tariffs on $300 billion in 
		Chinese imports, starting on Sept. 1.
 
 "Chinese private buyers are not going to be making any U.S. purchases 
		with a government ban in place," said Dan Basse, president of AgResource 
		Co. "These are the last sales we are going to see unless there's some 
		thawing or some movement in the U.S.-China trade negotiations."
 
 China bought 60,000 tonnes of wheat, 50,000 tonnes of sorghum and 1,350 
		tonnes of pork in the week ended Aug. 1, weekly U.S. Department of 
		Agriculture (USDA) data showed. The data also confirmed a new purchase 
		of about 71,200 tonnes of soybeans.
 
 The sales, a fraction of what China would normally buy from the United 
		States, occurred as top officials met in Shanghai for talks aimed at 
		restarting trade talks to end a year-long trade war.
 
 
		
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			Pork for sale is seen at a supermarket in Beijing, China, April 11, 
			2019. REUTERS/Jason Lee/File Photo 
            
			 
The miniscule sales are a sign of the rising intensity of a trade war that has 
riled markets, redrawn global supply chains and heaped economic pain on some of 
the world's largest companies, including grain merchants Archer Daniels Midland 
Co <ADM.N> and Cargill Inc [CARG.UL]. 
Chinese tariffs on U.S. soybeans have slashed exports of the most valuable U.S. 
crop and prompted the Trump administration to compensate farmers for two years 
with as much as $28 billion.
 The USDA report confirmed that export shipments of U.S. agricultural goods have 
continued despite the rising tensions.
 
 More than 8,500 tonnes of pork and 516,000 tonnes of soybeans were loaded and 
shipped to China last week, USDA data showed.
 
 Three bulk cargo vessels are waiting to be loaded with soybeans at Pacific 
Northwest ports and two more are en route to be loaded, a total haul estimated 
at around 325,000 tonnes, according to private shipping data seen by Reuters.
 
 (Reporting by Karl Plume in Chicago; Additional reporting by Tom Polansek; 
Editing by Matthew Lewis)
 
				 
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