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US farmers get little cheer from trade truce for now

Still no sign of any easing in China’s 25% retaliator­y tariff

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SINGAPORE: For a soybean farmer in Iowa or Illinois, it may be premature to celebrate the ceasefire in the trade war between the US and China.

After all, there’s still no sign of any easing in the 25% retaliator­y tariff that China levies on imports of American soybeans.

And while the US said top buyer China agreed at the summit in Buenos Aires to restart purchases of agricultur­al products immediatel­y, that wasn’t mentioned in the statement issued by the Chinese after the meeting.

Plus, market moves in reaction to news of the truce have so far only worsened crushing margins in China. Futures for soymeal, which is produced from crushing soy and is used for animal feed in China, extended losses on the Dalian Commodity Exchange.

Crushing margins in China have worsened after benchmark soybean futures in Chicago rose on Monday while soybean meal and soybean oil prices dropped in Dalian trading.

An indicative calculatio­n based simply on futures, exchange rates and prevailing taxes, shows a profit of less than US$10 a tonne for processing US beans in China as of yesterday. But that doesn’t include freight, insurance or other fees.

So, the market doubts there could be any commercial purchases without a cut in tariffs, said Monica Tu, an analyst at researcher Shanghai JC Intelligen­ce Co.

“I see little incentive for Chinese commercial crushers to buy US soybeans right now unless the 25% tariff is lifted, or US farmers cut prices even more,” Tu said by text message.

Any purchases made in the current conditions would probably be to supply state inventorie­s, she said.

China has indicated it could reimburse the cost of the 25% tariff if the cargoes are imported for state reserves, according to people familiar with the matter.

The different statements issued by the US and China on the outcome of the meeting between President Donald Trump and his counterpar­t Xi Jinping at the weekend highlight how much needs to be achieved in the next three months if the US soybean farmer is to find any stockpiles.

Also, the US crop is becoming less competitiv­e in the Chinese market as the harvest season approaches in South America.

America has probably already missed its best chance to sell soybeans to China, according to Cargill Inc, one of the world’s biggest agricultur­e commodity traders.

US soybeans incur tariffs totalling 28%, while Brazilian beans have an import duty of just 3% when entering China.

US farmers are pleased with the trade truce, but they’re not rejoicing until they see ships full of their crops headed to China.

The sentiment matters for Trump, who’s risked the support of Midwest growers by igniting a trade war that sent US soybean prices to the lowest in more than a decade while stockpiles pile up. kind of solace from rising

“The soybean inventory in the US will keep climbing if Chinese companies continue to not buy them,” the China National Grain and Oils Informatio­n Centre (CNGOIC) said yesterday in an e-mailed report.

Total imports for the 2018-2019 crop season starting October may fall by more than 10 million tonnes to 84 million tonnes as the spread of African swine fever in China reduced the appetite for the oilseed used in pig feed, the state researcher said.

Weather conditions in South American soybean producing areas are generally good at present, and the production prospects are optimistic, CNGOIC said in its monthly note.

Global soybean production is expected to increase by about 30 million tonnes in the 2018-2019 crop year, and soybean supply is abundant, it said. — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Getting worse: A stall of US Soybean Export Council is seen during the China Internatio­nal Import Expo in Shanghai. Market moves in reaction to news of the US-China trade truce have so far only worsened crushing margins in China. — Reuters
Getting worse: A stall of US Soybean Export Council is seen during the China Internatio­nal Import Expo in Shanghai. Market moves in reaction to news of the US-China trade truce have so far only worsened crushing margins in China. — Reuters

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