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						Exclusive: China buys U.S. soybeans a day after trade 
						talks - traders
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		 [February 02, 2019]   
		By Karl Plume 
 (Reuters) - Chinese state-owned firms 
		bought at least 1 million tonnes of U.S. soybeans on Friday, a day after 
		high-level bilateral talks yielded progress toward a trade deal and a 
		Chinese commitment to buy more U.S. soybeans.
 
 The purchases are slated for shipment between April and July, with a 
		large share expected from U.S. Gulf Coast export terminals, three 
		traders with knowledge of the deals said.
 
 One trader with direct knowledge of the deals said total purchases were 
		around 2.2 million tonnes. The other two traders said the sales were 
		similar to three recent waves of buying in which state-owned firms 
		booked 1 million to 1.5 million tonnes of soybeans.
 
 U.S. soybean futures <Sv1> rallied to multi-month highs on Friday on 
		news of renewed demand from the world's top importer.
 
 But the market's gains were restrained by worries that Chinese purchases 
		will hardly dent massive soybean stockpiles in the United States and 
		around the world. The looming harvest of a large soy crop in Brazil, the 
		world's top supplier, further capped prices.
 
 
		
		 
		"It certainly is good to see some concessions and more buying interest 
		from China, but this is a concession in terms of a larger trade 
		agreement. Brazilian offers are cheaper than we are so it's just part of 
		the negotiation," said Terry Linn, analyst with Chicago-based brokerage 
		Linn & Associates.
 
 Friday's purchases by state-owned firms were believed to be destined for 
		China's state reserves, and thus immune from high import tariffs on U.S. 
		beans. The 25 percent tariffs, imposed last summer in retaliation for 
		U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods, remain in place for U.S. soy imports by 
		commercial crushers in China.
 
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			Acres of soybeans seen at the Pioneer-DuPont Seed facility in 
			Addieville, Illinois U.S., September 19, 2018. Picture taken 
			September 19, 2018. REUTERS/Lawrence Bryant 
            
			 
Exports to China have plummeted this season during a bitter trade dispute, with 
swelling supplies sending prices to near decade lows last autumn and U.S. 
farmers struggling to turn a profit.
 China has been buying most of its soybeans from Brazil, which is in pace to 
harvest a bumper crop in the coming months.
 
 Friday's sales bring China's total purchases of the 2018 U.S. soybean harvest to 
at least 6.5 million tonnes, a fraction of its traditional annual haul from the 
United States of more than 30 million tonnes.
 
 Through January of 2017, more than 29.4 million tonnes of that season's harvest 
had already been shipped to China, with another 4 million tonnes sold and 
awaiting shipment, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data.
 
 Benchmark Chicago Board of Trade March futures climbed to $9.31-1/4 a bushel on 
Friday, the highest point for a most actively traded soy contract <Sv1> since 
mid-June. Beijing slapped steep tariffs on U.S. soybeans on July 6, effectively 
halting all U.S. shipments to their top customer.
 
 Before Friday's sales, China had previously booked an estimated 5 million tonnes 
of U.S. soybeans in three waves of purchases since U.S. President Donald Trump 
and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping agreed to a trade war detente on Dec. 1.
 
 After high-level trade talks in Washington this week, Chinese Vice Premier Liu 
He announced on Thursday China would buy an additional 5 million tonnes.
 
 (Additional reporting by Michael Hirtzer in Chicago; Editing by Chizu Nomiyama 
and Richard Chang)
 
				 
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