Home » World » China Holds Back on US Soybeans as Trade Tensions Rise

China Holds Back on US Soybeans as Trade Tensions Rise

by Lucas Fernandez – World Editor

China Resumes Limited US Oil purchases, Drops Google Antitrust probe Amid Trade Talk Preparations

BEIJING – China is taking incremental steps to ease⁢ trade​ tensions with the United States ahead of anticipated face-to-face negotiations later this year, including ‌resuming purchases of US oil after a six-month pause and dropping an antitrust ⁤examination into⁣ GoogleS ​Android operating system, according to reports. However, China continues to largely avoid​ US soybean purchases, a pattern not​ seen since the⁤ 1990s, despite president Trump’s calls for ⁢a ⁣quadrupling of orders.

While a broader trade ⁤deal remains unlikely to be finalized over the phone,⁢ according to analyst Rothman, agriculture – especially soybeans – will ‌be central to any agreement. Both sides are expected to pursue more realistic commitments than those outlined in the original Phase ‌One agreement.

China’s avoidance of US soybeans carries supply‌ risks.Brazilian soybean prices have risen sharply this year, ⁢and potential disruptions⁣ to the south American harvest could ⁤tighten global ​supply, potentially ‌forcing china to ⁢draw on its strategic reserves. Conversely, a sudden influx of US soybeans could depress domestic soymeal prices, disrupting existing stockpiling and hedging‌ strategies.

Purchasing⁣ managers in northern China report securing supplies only ⁤through next month due ‌to​ current high inventories, with ⁢one major crusher warning of potential meal price crashes from a US soybean surge.⁢ Both sources requested anonymity.

Despite tariffs, the US remains a highly efficient, low-cost soybean ⁤supplier, and China is⁤ currently paying a premium to source beans elsewhere, according to Trivium’s ‌Pay. During the initial trade war, China granted some exemptions allowing limited US agricultural imports even while imposing retaliatory tariffs.

“If a deal is struck, there will definitely be some level of demand ⁢for US⁣ soybeans from Chinese buyers,” Pay stated. “The⁢ issue is the trade war – ‌not a total ​lack of demand.”

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