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Pigs nearing market weight stand in a pen at Duncan Farms in Polo, Illinois on April 9, 2018. Photo: Reuters

Surplus pork is biting US hog markets as trade war turns the world’s biggest customer away from American farmers

  • China just made its biggest-ever cancellation of American pork, scrapping a purchase of 14,700 metric tonnes, data showed on Thursday
Commodities

Trade concerns are starting to make all other factors in the hog market look obsolete.

Futures have tumbled to the lowest since March. That’s as African swine fever decimates China’s pig herd in an unprecedented global supply disruption.

Even though the Asian nation is importing huge amounts of meat, American producers are losing out to rivals in Brazil and elsewhere because of Donald Trump’s trade war. What’s more, the US president’s threat of additional tariffs is sparking concerns that a deal to end the spat is even farther away.

China just made its biggest-ever cancellation of American pork, scrapping a purchase of 14,700 metric tonnes, data showed on Thursday. US farmers had built up their hog herds in anticipation of more exports to meet that supply gap, but if trade tensions continue to run high, they could instead be facing a massive domestic glut.

“China is just fighting back -- they cancelled all that business, and that just has the market reeling,” said Dennis Smith, senior account executive at Archer Financial Services in Chicago. “We’ve got way too much pork if we cannot get a big export programme going.”

Hogs in Chicago tumbled 17 per cent in the week ended Friday, the biggest loss for rolling most-active futures since last July. Meanwhile, a measure of historical 30-day volatility is surging.

“This market is truly the Wild West,” analysts at CommStock Investments said in a report.

American pork producers are losing $1 billion annually because of the trade war, David Herring, president of the National Pork Producers Council, told a House Agriculture subcommittee in July. The dispute with China is costing producers US$8 per animal a year, he said.

Investors are fleeing. Open interest is near a four-month low reached in July. The measure of contracts outstanding had surged in May to the highest since 2013 as China’s swine-fever woes built up expectations of bigger American exports.

Explainer: Deadly in pigs but harmless to humans, why is African swine fever such a threat to China’s economy?

About a quarter of US pork production is typically destined for shipment, making the market particularly sensitive to trade disruptions.

Some funds seem to have used recent price declines to lock in returns from bearish wagers. In the week ended July 30, money managers held a hog net-long position of 39,964 futures and options, up 19 per cent from a week earlier, US Commodity Futures Trading Commission data showed Friday. The figure, which measures the difference between bets on a price increase and wagers on a decline, mainly reflected a 12 per cent drop for short-only bets.

The aggregate number of short and long positions slid 1.8 per cent, the biggest drop in eight weeks.

“Everyone is reacting day by day,” moving along with Trump’s Twitter feed, Smith said. “Nobody is trading it.”

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Trump leaves US hog farmers in lurch
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