China brought in 135,814 tonnes of U.S. soybeans in January, up
95 percent from 69,298 tonnes in December. But the figure was
still down 99.7 percent from 5.82 million tonnes a year earlier
as Beijing's hefty tariffs on American shipments curbed
purchases.
China typically buys from the United States in the last quarter
and first couple of months of the year, when the U.S. harvest
dominates the market. But Chinese buyers have steered clear of
U.S. produce amid the tit-for-tat trade dispute and scooped up
Brazilian beans instead.
Chinese imports of the oilseed from America, its second largest
supplier, fell sharply last year and ground to a virtual halt in
November. Limited buying resumed after the two countries agreed
to a truce on Dec. 1.
However, China brought in 4.93 million tonnes of Brazilian
soybeans in January, more than doubling last year's 2.07 million
tonnes.
Stockpiling means Chinese crushers have sufficient stocks on
hand at present, a situation set to continue in coming months,
analysts said, as the new Brazilian crop reaches the market.
China crushes soybeans to produce soymeal which is fed to its
massive livestock herds but an ongoing African swine fever
epidemic in China has also dampened demand for feed.
Top negotiators from Beijing and Washington last week discussed
a set of agreements aimed at ending the trade war, including a
10-item list to alleviate trade imbalances, with additional
Chinese purchases of U.S. agricultural products.
China committed to buy an additional 10 million tonnes of U.S.
soybeans, U.S. Agriculture Secretary Sonny Perdue said on
Twitter on Friday.
President Donald Trump said on Sunday he would delay an increase
in U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods scheduled for later this week
thanks to progress in trade talks.
(Reporting by Tom Daly and Min Zhang; Writing by Beijing
Monitoring Desk; Editing by David Goodman and Kirsten Donovan)
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