China imports will keep U.S. soybean market on its toes -Braun (RT)

When it comes to assessing demand for U.S. soybeans, never underestimate the Chinese.

China’s penchant for the oilseed has mushroomed in recent years, complementing growth in the country’s livestock sector, particularly pork. As the world’s largest soybean consumer, China will use over 40 percent more soybeans than the world will have in storage next year.

The United States just began its 2016-17 soybean marketing year, and China will have a big say in how much supply is left over at the close of next August.

The increasing likelihood of a record-large soybean crop in the United States, one of China’s key suppliers, may have at least temporarily masked some of the risk to the domestic balance sheet.

Analysts expect U.S. soybean production to increase in Monday’s U.S. Department of Agriculture supply and demand report, but they expect 2016-17 ending stocks to remain relatively unchanged near 330 million bushels.

Although this reflects that huge yields will be offset by increasing demand, there is the potential for demand to pull U.S. soybean inventory even lower throughout the next year if China’s recent habits remain the same.

CHINA BY THE NUMBERS

In 1996-97, China imported just over 2 million tonnes of soybeans and a decade later this figure had climbed to 29 million tonnes.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture has projected China to import 87 million tonnes in the 2016-17 marketing year, which will begin on Oct. 1. This is the equivalent of 3.197 billion bushels, and for comparative purposes, the United States produced 3.929 billion bushels of soybeans last year.

To put China’s massive soybean demand trend into perspective, the East Asian country now accounts for nearly two-thirds of the world’s imports of the oilseed. When subtracting China from the mix, the global soybean import trend over the past 20 years is practically rendered flat

As the world’s two biggest soybean producers, the United States and Brazil are naturally China’s primary suppliers. Over the last couple of years, the two countries have been responsible for 85 to 90 percent of China’s total soybean imports

Not surprisingly, China buys the majority of soybeans that Brazil and the United States export. In 2014-15, some 72 percent of Brazil’s shipments were imported by China, and the corresponding figure for the United States was 59 percent.

The United States supplies the first half of China’s marketing year while Brazil takes over the second half. Peak soybean shipments from the United States to China occur around December, and Brazil will peak between April and May

LITTLE INCREASES ARE HUGE

In May 2014, the U.S. Department of Agriculture placed Chinese soybean imports for the new 2014-15 marketing year at 72 million tonnes. At the conclusion of the season in late 2015, China had actually imported 78.35 million tonnes.

In May 2015, the initial estimate for the nearly completed 2015-16 year was 77.5 million tonnes. As of last month, USDA expected that China will import 83 million tonnes of soybeans in the current marketing year.

The lesson? China’s soybean appetite seems limitless, as its annual imports have been significantly underestimated in the past two years.

The difference in the initial and final Chinese soybean import figures from 2014-15 was 233 million bushels, very close to the 255 million bushels that the United States is estimated to have left over after its recently concluded 2015-16 marketing year.

China may not reach 83 million tonnes in 2015-16, though, as Shanghai-based analyst JC Intelligence Co Ltd (JCI) said on Thursday that September soybean imports may fall below 6 million tonnes.

This would be well below last September’s 7.3 million tonnes.

Through August, China has imported 76 million tonnes of soybeans. But even an optimistic assumption of 6 million tonnes imported during September would land the final volume about 6 percent higher than the initial assumptions – a difference of 165 million bushels.

The brief slowdown in imports should be only temporary, according to JCI. Chinese demand for U.S. soybeans received a boost last week as a delegation of buyers signed agreements to purchase nearly 4 million tonnes at a signing ceremony in Indianapolis.

In the United States, about 41 percent of the expected soybean export volume for 2016-17 has been booked through Aug. 25. This rate is very comparable to previous years and implies that U.S. soybean shippers are about to get pretty busy in a couple of months, especially if sales continue on a strong course.

Maybe it is hard to imagine that China’s potential 87 million-tonne haul could edge much higher over the next year or so, but then again, it was probably difficult to fathom a volume over 30 million tonnes just a decade ago.

Of course, Brazil’s harvest early next year will be crucial in just how much of the oilseed China can acquire, as well as the timing and the source. But the United States will take the leading role in supplying China with soybeans for at least the next six months, and it is a good idea to pay attention because increasing Chinese demand could cut down U.S. supply in a jiffy.

  • Graphic-Global soybean imports since 1996/97; with and without China
  • Graphic-Soybean suppliers to China, 2013-2016
  • Graphic-China soybean imports by month from U.S. and Brazil

China sees slight increase in soybean imports this year – grain official

  • China 2016/17 soy imports seen below USDA current forecast
  • Corn imports set to fall due to large feed grain stocks

China, the world’s biggest soy buyer, expects to import 85 million tonnes of soybeans in 2016/17, up from the prior season, although bumper stocks in storage should limit the increase, a senior official said on Tuesday.

Li Xigui, division director with state-run China National Grain & Oils Information Center (CNGOIC), told the IGC grain conference in London, soybean imports were expected to reach 82 million tonnes in the 2015/16 year on an October-September season.

That compared with 78.35 million tonnes in 2014/15, CNGOIC figures showed.

The forecast for 2016/17 is slightly below the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s current forecast for Chinese soybean imports of 87 million tonnes.

“There will be increase but not to such a great level,” Li said through a translator.

“Although American soybean exports to China are on the increase, the increase is controllable.”

Li said China had been stockpiling soybeans for a number of years.

“We need to hurry up the sale of these reserves,” he said, adding that the global market was “too optimistic” about further Chinese soybean demand.

China imported 7.66 million tonnes of soybeans in May, up 8.3 pct from 7.07 million tonnes in April, figures from the General Administration of Customs of China showed last week.

Li forecast a marginal decline in China’s wheat production in 2016/17 (June/May) to 130.1 million tonnes from the prior season’s 130.2 million.

Imports were seen stable at 3.0 million tonnes.

China corn production was forecast to fall to 218 million tonnes from the prior season’s 224.6 million, reflecting a 2.6 percent fall in planted area and 0.5 percent drop in yields.

Li said corn imports would, however, decline to 1.0 million tonnes from the prior season’s 2.7 million tonnes due to a glut of supplies of feed grains.

“Our capacity is saturated so we try to reduce our stocks,” he said.

Soybeans fall for third day on poor exports, drop in China’s markets

  • Soybeans face pressure from poor U.S. exports, higher planting
  • Steep decline in China’s commodity markets weighs
  • Soybeans on track for 5th week of gains, up 3 pct on USDA f’cast

Adds details, quotes

By Naveen Thukral

Chicago soybeans slid for a third consecutive session on Friday with poor U.S. weekly export data adding pressure on prices but the market is poised for a fifth week of gains, underpinned by forecasts of tighter supplies.

Corn and wheat are on track for weekly gains even though prices are expected to remain anchored by abundant global grain supplies.

The Chicago Board of Trade most-active soybean contract Sv1 is set for a 2.9 percent gain this week, corn Cv1 has risen 2.5 percent and wheat Wv1 has gained 0.7 percent. On Friday, soybeans fell 0.6 percent, corn lost 0.4 percent and wheat dropped 0.2 percent.

There was additional pressure on agricultural commodities stemming from a broad decline in Chinese futures.

“U.S. soybean exports were down and Chinese commodity market are taking a hit today which is adding pressure on CBOT,” said Kaname Gokon at brokerage Okato Shoji in Tokyo.

“The market’s upside momentum has reduced because short-covering by funds and commercials is over.”

China’s Dalian soybeans DSAcv1 slid almost 3 percent, soyoil DBYcv1 lost 4 percent and soymeal DSMcv1 gave up about 1 percent.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture’s weekly export sales report put sales of U.S. old-crop soybeans in the latest week at 212,500 tonnes and new-crop sales at just 6,900 tonnes, below trade expectations.

Traders speculate that the USDA’s June 30 acreage report could show a shift of about 1 million acres from corn into soybeans compared to the government’s March 31 planting intentions report.

The U.S. corn crop was 64 percent planted as of May 8, but rainy weather may have slowed progress since then. Soybeans can be planted later than corn, so delays tend to favour soybeans.

CBOT corn on Thursday drew support from weekly U.S. export sales topping 1 million tonnes, and news that private exporters sold 210,000 tonnes of U.S. corn to Saudi Arabia in the last day.

Wheat fundamentals remain bearish, with the USDA forecasting that U.S. inventories will rise above 1 billion bushels by June 1, 2017, the most in 29 years.

Commodity funds were net buyers of CBOT corn and wheat futures contracts on Thursday but net sellers in soybeans.

Trader estimates of net fund buying in corn ranged from 13,000 to 17,000 contracts. They were net sellers of an estimated 7,000 to 10,000 soybean contracts and net buyers of 3,000 to 5,000 wheat contracts.

China 2016 corn output to fall 2.9 pct as stockpiling ends

China’s corn production in 2016 is expected to decline 2.9 percent from last year to 218 million tonnes, as farmers in the northeast are expected to switch crops, a state-backed think tank said on Monday.

China decided in March to end a corn stockpiling programme that supported domestic prices for farmers and at the same time spurred imports of cheaper substitutes like sorghum and distillers’ grains.

The China National Grain and Oils Information Center (CNGOIC) said it expected the policy change to bring output down by 6.58 million tonnes this year, with demand already weakening.

The CNGOIC said feed demand had slowed, and was expected to drop 10.4 percent to 110.4 million tonnes over the 2015-16 marketing year. Overall corn consumption was expected to reach 185.54 million tonnes over the period, leaving a surplus of 41.85 million tonnes.

Chinese corn prices had already fallen by a large amount since the beginning of the 2015-16 marketing year, making imports less attractive, CNGOIC added.

It predicted corn imports would fall by more than a half to 2.7 million tonnes over the 2015-16 marketing year, while imports of distillers’ grains would fall to 3.5 million tonnes over the same period, down nearly 60 percent from the 2014-15 marketing year.

Chinese distillers’ grains imports over the whole of 2015 hit a record 6.82 million tonnes, up 26 percent on the year, according to the country’s customs authority. Sorghum imports also jumped 85 percent on the year to a record 10.69 million tonnes.