Brazil’s expected soy crop losses already a modern era record -Braun
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[February 10, 2022] By
Karen Braun
FORT COLLINS, Colo. (Reuters) -A Brazilian
soybean crop as large as 134 million tonnes seemed unimaginable just a
couple of years ago, but that figure now represents unprecedented losses
in the soybean market as it is known today.
These drought-induced harvest reductions keep this year’s global soybean
carryout projection at an eight-year low relative to demand, but the
blow is softened by top importer China’s diminishing needs.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Wednesday cut No. 1 exporter
Brazil’s 2021-22 soybean crop to 134 million tonnes from 139 million in
January and 144 million in December, which was the original outlook.
The 7% decline from December to February is USDA’s largest two-month cut
since the 2012 crop, which also battled drought. But the global soybean
market has transformed drastically since then.
The 2011-12 season was the last time the United States was the top
soybean exporter, but it has increasingly been Brazil’s game ever since.
Brazil’s share of world soybean exports a decade ago was 40% versus
about 55% today.
Brazil’s exports have grown more than 150% in the last decade and even
with the drought this year are set to outpace U.S. shipments by more
than 60%. Ten-year U.S. export growth is about 50%.
Brazil’s soybean boom has been made possible by the doubling of its crop
over the last decade on both area and yield expansions. Brazil’s harvest
first surpassed the U.S. one in 2017-18.
USDA’s latest reductions are among many industry outlooks calling for a
smaller 2022 Brazilian soybean crop, but the agency’s number is on the
higher side. Some analysts have predicted a harvest up to 14% off
original ideas, double the USDA’s markdown.
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Anderson Soletti shows soybeans at his soy plantation affected by
drought, in Espumoso, Rio Grande do Sul state, Brazil January 10,
2022. REUTERS/Diego Vara
Historical crop estimates do not give a great indication of how much further
Brazil’s soybean crop may fall because there are so few examples. The 2009 crop
suffered similar losses as 2012, and final production in both years came in
close to USDA’s lowest estimates of the season.
Brazil’s statistics body, CONAB, will publish fresh outlooks for the soybean
crop on Thursday, but its starting point and cuts have been more conservative.
The group in December saw the crop at 142.8 million tonnes but last month scaled
back to 140.5 million.
USDA’s Wednesday report supported recent ideas that China’s soybean demand has
slipped, and the current year import outlook was chopped to 97 million tonnes
from 100 million last month, a relatively large monthly decline. That is below
the year-ago 99.8 million.
Some market participants assumed Brazil’s crop losses would be reflected on the
U.S. balance sheet with an export bump, which did not pan out due to China’s
lower imports. But global buyers have recently been snapping up old-crop U.S.
soybeans, so U.S. business could be due for a lift if Brazil’s fortunes get any
worse.
Karen Braun is a market analyst for Reuters. Views expressed above are her own.
(Editing by Matthew Lewis)
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