China Daily Global Edition (USA)

CEO: China not buying soybeans from US but rather Brazil, Canada

- By CHINA DAILY

The world’s biggest oilseed processor confirmed on Wednesday that China has essentiall­y stopped buying US supplies of soybeans amid the brewing China-US trade war.

“Whatever they’re buying is non-US,” Bunge Ltd Chief Executive Officer Soren Schroder said in an interview with Bloomberg. “They’re buying beans in Canada, in Brazil, mostly Brazil, but very deliberate­ly not buying anything from the US,” he said. “How long that will last, who knows? But so long as there is this big cloud of uncertaint­y, that’s likely to continue.”

Schroder told Reuters that “nobody’s willing to take the risk of committing to US soybeans to China in the current context”.

Last month, China announced plans to impose tariffs on 106 US goods that have a combined trading value of more than $50 billion annually, including tariffs of 25 percent on soybeans. They are America’s top agricultur­al export to China, worth more than $12 billion.

China’s action was in response to the Trump administra­tion’s publicatio­n of a list of about 1,300 Chinese exports — also worth about $50 billion annually — that it intends to target with 25 percent tariffs.

Schroder told Bloomberg that his company still has been able to meet Chinese demand for soybeans by filling shipments with supplies from outside the US. The White Plains, New York-based company has a large presence in South America.

“I would rather say that we would prefer that free trade and no disruption­s take place because it’s not good for anyone,” he said. “We are, by virtue of our footprint, in a very good position to deal with” the situation, he said.

Other agricultur­al products caught up in the dispute include corn, pork and the feed grain sorghum.

On Tuesday, Chicago-based Archer Daniels Midland Co (ADM), a major US agricultur­e commoditie­s trader, said that the China-US trade dispute over sorghum will cause a $30 million hit to its trading profit in the second quarter.

The announceme­nt by ADM was the first confirmed financial effect among global grain-trading companies from Beijing’s move on April 17 to require hefty anti-dumping deposits on US sorghum imports, according to Reuters.

ADM is one of the largest sorghum exporters to China. Other global commoditie­s traders may report that they were negatively affected by the trade dispute later in the earnings season, analysts said. The company reported a stronger-thanexpect­ed first-quarter profit on Tuesday on record soybean-processing and higher margins.

More than 20 bulk US sorghum shipments were on their way to China when the announceme­nt was made, including more than a dozen that were loaded at ADM export terminals in Texas. Several of the cargoes were resold to new buyers.

ADM on Tuesday still reported a 16 percent increase in quarterly profit led by record volumes in soybean processing,.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States