USDA confirms US soyabean sales to China

15 Dec, 2018

Private exporters have sold 1.13 million tonnes of US soyabeans for delivery to China, the US Agriculture Department said on Thursday, confirming sales Reuters reported a day earlier, though soya futures fell as traders hoped for more deals.
Traders said on Wednesday that China, the world's top soyabean importer, had booked its first significant US soyabean purchases in more than six months after a trade truce was reached on December 1. The sales came after US President Donald Trump and China's President Xi Jinping agreed to a 90-day detente in their tit-for-tat tariff war to negotiate a trade deal after meeting at the Group of 20 summit in Buenos Aires.
Trump told Reuters in an interview on Tuesday the Chinese were already buying a "tremendous amount" of US soyabeans and would also soon cut tariffs on US autos. But it was unclear how many soyabeans China would actually buy, with tariffs still in place and a record Brazilian crop nearly ready for harvest.
China last year purchased about 60 percent of US soyabean exports in deals valued at more than $12 billion. The purchases confirmed on Monday were less than $500 million.
"There was talk we'd see like 5 million tonnes over the next few days, so we will need some follow-through buying from China, especially outside of Sino," one US trader said, referring to China's state-run buyer Sinograin.
China dropped out of the US market after Beijing slapped tariffs on US shipments on July 6 in retaliation for American duties on Chinese goods. US exports to China dropped to 8.2 million tonnes in the first 10 months of the year, down from 21.4 million in the same period last year, according to government figures.
With exports to China drying up, US soyabean prices tumbled to their lowest levels in a decade. They rose to their highest since midsummer on Wednesday, but January futures were down 12 cents at $9.08 a bushel on Thursday.
The White House this week delayed additional payments from a $12 billion aid package for farmers stung by the trade war because it expected Beijing to resume buying US soyabeans.

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