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Traders have been awaiting proof from the USDA that China is ramping up purchases of grains and soy from US farmers. Photo: Bloomberg

Is China buying American soybeans? Washington shutdown keeps traders guessing

  • Beijing resumed US cargoes earlier this month after the two sides agreed to a trade war truce, but hefty tariffs remain in place and there is uncertainty over how much it will buy

Commodity traders are in the dark because of the partial US government shutdown, unable to see daily and weekly reports of agricultural exports to obtain clues as to whether China is following through with promises to buy grain and soy amid the ongoing trade war.

Traders have been anxiously awaiting proof from the US Department of Agriculture (USDA) that China is ramping up purchases of grains and soy from US farmers, who are preparing their spring planting and trying to secure financing for seeds, fertiliser and land rents.

Trade war truce: China’s Sinograin confirms US soybean purchase

Now, trade experts and grain analysts warn the suspension of the reports is clouding the marketplace and potentially giving an advantage to big grain companies directly involved in the export trade. The government shut down partially at midnight on December 21.

“We’re watching sales to China like a hawk,” said Ted Seifried, vice-president and chief agricultural market strategist for the Zaner Group.

Beijing resumed buying US cargoes earlier this month, after the two countries agreed on December 1 to a trade war truce. But hefty tariffs on US cargoes remain in place and there is uncertainty over how much the top US soybean customer will purchase.

China buys US$300 million of US soybeans in post-trade war truce deals

The gap also gives the large commercial grain merchants – such as Archer Daniels Midland Co, Bunge Ltd, Cargill Inc and Louis Dreyfus Corp – an advantage by allowing them to keep their export deals with countries like China and Mexico out of the public marketplace.

ADM and Cargill said on Friday they had no comment. The other two companies could not be reached for comment.

Rich Feltes, vice-president for research with Chicago-based brokerage R.J. O’Brien, said the absence of USDA export sales data can increase the risk involved in trading agricultural markets, pushing speculators to the side.

“It gives a little bit of unfair advantage to exporters who either are or are not making sales, and can trade that information accordingly,” he said.

Along with its weekly export sales reports, the USDA has issued daily announcements of grain and soybean sales over 100,000 tonnes since 1977. The reporting system was launched in response to the purchase of millions of tonnes of US grain by the Soviet Union in 1972 in deals that resulted in soaring US grain and food prices

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University of Illinois agricultural economist Scott Irwin said the partial shutdown could also deal a blow to farmers suffering from the US-China dispute, by delaying aid payments meant to help offset some of the losses for crops hit by retaliatory Chinese tariffs in a trade war launched by US President Donald Trump.

“If you’re talking about cash in the farmer’s pocket, the longer this goes on, the longer it’s going to delay that programme, which is really just getting ramped up,” Irwin said.

Along with its weekly export sales reports, the USDA has issued daily announcements of grain and soybean sales over 100,000 tonnes since 1977. Photo: Reuters

The shutdown entered its seventh day on Friday, and was on track to continue into next week and possibly longer. It affects about 800,000 employees of the departments of homeland security, justice, agriculture, commerce and other agencies.

If the shutdown persists, it also could jeopardise the release of a host of hotly anticipated monthly and quarterly grain supply and demand reports.

China cuts tariffs on more than 700 goods in bid to open up economy

The USDA on Friday reiterated that the shutdown, if it continues, would halt its “World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates” report and reports by its National Agricultural Statistics Service, which tracks quarterly US grain stocks and US winter wheat seedings.

Those documents, along with an annual summary of US crop production, were scheduled for release on January 11.

In the reports, Feltes said analysts expected to see the USDA trim its estimates of the average 2018 US corn and soybean yields, imply strong feed usage of corn in the first quarter, and shed light on how many acres of winter wheat farmers were able to plant this past autumn, given excessive rains in many areas.

“Those are all bullish influences that we are going to be denied confirmation of,” he said.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Shutdown keeps traders guessing on whether China is buying US soy
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