Exclusive-China snaps up large volumes of French, Ukrainian feed grain
Send a link to a friend
[December 10, 2021] By
Gus Trompiz and Michael Hogan
PARIS (Reuters) - Chinese buyers have been
making large purchases of French wheat and barley along with Ukrainian
corn and barley in the last week, trade sources said, taking advantage
of a pause in surging prices to cover some of their feed grain needs.
While the total volumes bought were not yet clear, the sources said
importers had secured at least several hundred thousand tonnes of grain
from France and Ukraine.
The Chinese buyers also made major purchases of Australian feed wheat
that again represented at least several hundred thousand tonnes, some of
the sources added.
The deals point to China's continued major grain import requirement,
despite the arrival of its domestic corn crop and difficulties in its
pig industry, and further illustrate the readiness of buyers to seize on
falls in international prices.
Wheat futures soared to a nine-year high in the United States and a
record peak in Europe last month, fuelled by concern about rain damage
to Australia's harvest and Russian export curbs, before retreating
sharply since last week. [GRA/] [GRA/EU]
For French wheat, buyers were understood to have booked between six and
10 vessels, or potentially up to 600,000 tonnes, for shipment mainly
between January and March, six traders said.
That followed smaller deals for French wheat in mid-November for two or
three vessels for shipment this month, they said.
The French wheat was expected to be used mainly for livestock feed,
although some may be for milling markets, the traders added.
"French wheat is currently looking attractive in price to the Chinese
after falling from its peaks," a European trader said. [GRA/EU]
"China is also believed to have been making large purchases of wheat
from Australia recently with China’s economic recovery generating
demand."
The latest sales would bring cumulative exports of French wheat to China
in 2021/22 to 2 million tonnes, surpassing already large volumes in the
past two seasons, traders said.
[to top of second column] |
An employee operates a combine as he harvests wheat in a field near
the village of Hrebeni in Kyiv region, Ukraine July 17, 2020.
REUTERS/Valentyn Ogirenko
Chinese buyers are also making forward purchases of 2022 harvest barley from
France and Ukraine, the sources said.
Around four vessels of French barley and up to 10 cargoes of Ukrainian barley
were booked for shipment mainly in July-August next year, according to at least
four traders, although some said purchases may be optional deals that can be
supplied from either country.
There was ongoing interest from Chinese buyers for French wheat and barley,
although no further deals were reported as of early on Friday, traders said.
In corn, Chinese buyers ordered cargoes from Ukraine for January-April shipment,
four sources said. Estimates of volume varied from several to 10 or more
cargoes, with one source seeing overall volume as high as 1 million tonnes.
Traders estimated prices for Ukrainian corn for January-February shipment to
China this week at around $270-$273 a tonne, free on board.
As in a previous round of purchases last month, Ukrainian corn appeared more
expensive than U.S. supplies. Traders suggested Chinese buyers may be put off by
a U.S. requirement to disclose large sales that can lead to price rises.
China is traditionally a major importer of Ukrainian corn and barley. Traders
estimate Ukraine could ship 5 million tonnes of corn to China from what is
expected to be a record 2021 Ukrainian crop.
(Reporting by Gus Trompiz in Paris, Michael Hogan in Hamburg, Pavel Polityuk in
Kyiv and Hallie Gu in Beijing; Editing by Veronica Brown and Kirsten Donovan)
[© 2021 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2021 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Thompson Reuters is solely responsible for this content.
|