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An employee picks out bad beans from a pile of soybeans at a supermarket in Wuhan, Hubei province. The insatiable hunger for soybeans by China is trimming a record US harvest. Photo: Reuters

New | China’s massive soybean imports eating into record US bean crop

China buys 60 per cent of world’s soybean exports used as animal feed for poultry and pig industry on mainland

Commodities

US farmers just can’t seem to grow enough soybeans to satisfy China.

For the third year in a row, US production is expected to set a record, the best such string since 1979. Yet, with output dropping elsewhere, a flurry of demand from China and other importers is eating away at stockpiles. The result: For the first time in three years, domestic inventories are poised to drop below the previous season, according to analysts surveyed by Bloomberg.

Soybeans are used to make everything from animal feed to cooking oil, soy sauce and tofu. Since 2005, China’s imports of the commodity have more than tripled, and it now buys more than 60 per cent of the world’s exports. The demand is primarily driven by its livestock sector as a growing middle class consumes more meat.

Ducks are herded by a breeder in Shandong province, China. Photo: Reuters
Lve chickens are kept in a cage at a wholesale poultry market in Shanghai. Photo: AP
Pigs stand in their pens at a farm in Zhuji, east China's Zhejiang province. Photo: AFP

As contrary weather hindered crops in Latin America, US soybeans have secured seven weeks of record export sales since May. To maintain “adequate supplies” domestically, US fields need to beat last year’s record yield of 48 bushels per acre, according to Daniel Basse, president of AgResource Co., a Chicago-based industry researcher.

“We can use everything we produce,” Basse said by telephone. “It’s a big crop, but the big demand story is coming on now. The US will be the main source for soybeans from now through Valentine’s Day because of crop problems in Brazil from hot, dry weather and flooding in Argentina.”

Brazil is forecast to be the world’s leading soybean exporter in the current season, shipping 57.2 million tonnes, ahead of the US’s 48.9 million, the USDA said last month. Argentina is the biggest shipper of soybean meal and oil.

Planting progress for the US crop in May was faster than the prior five-year average, allowing the plants to take advantage of June’s sunny weather. Rain in early July then boosted soil moisture, raising crop ratings to the highest since 2004. The forecast for more rain in August is key for the plants to reach full yield potential as plant pods fill up with beans, said Troy Deutmeyer, an agronomist with Dupont Co.’s Pioneer seed unit in Dyersville, Iowa.

In Illinois, the biggest grower after Iowa, the crop is very good, relatively disease-free and “eye-appealing,” according to Matthew Brandt, the regional agronomy lead for St. Louis-based Monsanto Co. Soybean plants are larger than normal, which can limit yield potential because plants used more energy to grow before making pods and filling them with beans, Brandt said in an interview.

On Friday, the USDA will update its monthly crop forecasts in this year’s first corn and soybean estimates, based on farmer surveys and field measurements in 11 states from Arkansas to South Dakota.

Domestic farmers in the US are poised to collect 3.948 billion bushels of the oilseed this season, the most ever and higher than the government’s July forecast, according to a Bloomberg survey of 33 analysts and firms. Inventories next year are seen falling to 321 million bushels from 324 million for the season that ends on August 31, a Bloomberg survey showed.

“It’s a big crop, but the big demand story is coming on now. The US will be the main source for soybeans from now through Valentine’s Day because of crop problems in Brazil from hot, dry weather and flooding in Argentina”
Daniel Basse, president of AgResource Co

For 10 consecutive days ending on August 9, US exporters sold a total of 3.17 million tonnes (116 million bushels) to China and unknown buyers, mostly for delivery after September 1, according to USDA data. Spot shipments have also been strong, with the USDA inspecting 972,001 tonnes in the week ended August 4, a record for the time of year. In the week ended August 4, sales for delivery after September 1 more than doubled to 2.79 million tonnes from the prior week, the government said Thursday in a report.

With a few more strong weeks, US shipments in the year that ends August 31 may breach the July USDA forecast of 1.795 billion bushels, reaching as high as 1.88 billion bushels, according to AgResources’ Basse.

The gains come amid a slump in South American sales.

Brazil’s exports peaked in April, earlier than usual, and dropped to a three-year low in July of 5.8 million tonnes, according to trade ministry data. The country’s government crop forecasting agency has lowered its production outlook to 95.4 million tonnes, down 0.8 per cent from the prior year. Louis Dreyfus Co. this week said it will halt soybean crushing at two plants in Brazil because of “current supply and demand conditions.”

A measure of global soybean stockpiles relative to consumption is poised to fall to 20 per cent in the 2016-17 season, the lowest in five years and a second straight decline, according to USDA estimates made in July.

“If I’m reliant on importing soybeans then, while I might be happy or relatively contented with the size of the US crop, my attention rightly switches to what’s going to happen in South America for the next crop,” said Fiona Boal, director of commodity research at Fulcrum Asset Management in London. “There’s just no wiggle room with the global soybean balance sheet.”

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