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China makes first big US soybean purchase since Trump-Xi truce

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CHICAGO: China made its first major purchases of US soybeans since President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping struck a trade war truce earlier this month, providing some relief to US farmers who have struggled to find buyers for their record-large harvest. Trump said in an interview on Tuesday the Chinese were already buying a “tremendous amount” of US soybeans and would also soon cut tariffs on US autos.


The purchase of over 1.5 million tonnes of beans is the most concrete evidence yet that China is making good on pledges the US government said Xi made when the two leaders met on Dec. 1 and agreed to a 90-day detente to negotiate a trade deal.


Global markets had whipsawed since then, with little sign that China was making the substantial purchases of US farm, energy and industrial products that Trump said would start immediately after the meeting.


Investors have been skeptical about the progress made toward ending a trade war that has disrupted the flow of hundreds of billions of dollars of goods between the world’s two largest economies. The arrest in Canada of a top Chinese executive from technology giant Huawei Technologies Co Ltd also stoked concern in markets that the trade war could worsen.


In another sign of concessions to the United States, China appears to be easing its high-tech industrial push, dubbed “Made in China 2025,” which has long irked Washington.


China has also told state oil trader Unipec to buy US oil, and the United States is expecting Beijing to cut tariffs on US-made autos and car parts.


The soybean purchases by Chinese state-owned companies, valued at more than $500 million, will do little to reduce the $43.1 billion US trade deficit with China, which Trump wants to narrow over the long term.


The purchases will, however, provide a goodwill gesture before the next round of US-China talks to change their terms of trade. The United States has a long list of complaints against China on intellectual property, forced technology transfers and industrial subsidies.


The soybean exports will also provide relief to US farmers. Soybeans are the single most valuable US agricultural export product and China bought 60 per cent of those exports in 2017, worth $12.25 billion.


But China has been out of the market since Beijing imposed a tariff on US soy imports in July, pushing prices of the oilseed to decade-lows.


Benchmark soybean futures Sv1 on the Chicago Board of Trade hit their highest level since midsummer on Wednesday. Chinese state-run firms Sinograin and Cofco bought the soybeans, said one European trader. The sellers included global agricultural merchants Cargill Inc, Louis Dreyfus Company and US farmer-owned agriculture company CHS Inc.


The trader said China was seeking to buy a total of 2.5 million to 3 million tonnes of US soybeans. Cargill and CHS declined to comment. Dreyfus did not immediately respond to requests for comment.


One US trader with direct knowledge of the deals said Chinese state-owned firms bought at least 12 cargoes for shipment from January to March. Another trader with direct knowledge of the deals and one who sells beans to exporters involved said around 30 cargoes had traded by Wednesday afternoon. — Reuters



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