Home Asia China Buys U.S. Soybeans After Leaders’ Call

China Buys U.S. Soybeans After Leaders’ Call

China, after months of avoiding U.S. soybeans during a trade standoff, resumed buying following late-October talks between the two nations’ leaders in South Korea.

China has purchased at least 10 shipments of U.S. soybeans — worth about $300 million — in deals signed since Tuesday, according to two traders familiar with the transactions. The buying came just one day after the two countries’ presidents held a phone call.

The purchases of the unusually large volumes extend a surge in Chinese buying after the recent thaw in U.S.-China trade relations. U.S. President Donald Trump touted relations with China as “extremely strong” after a phone call with his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping on Monday.

Trump said he had pressed Xi to accelerate and increase Beijing’s purchases of U.S. goods during the call, and that the Chinese leader had “more or less agreed”.

One trader said China bought about 12 cargoes, while another estimated the volume at 10–15. Each cargo is about 60,000 to 65,000 metric tons.

All the cargoes are scheduled for January shipment from U.S. Gulf Coast terminals and Pacific Northwest ports, the sources said on Wednesday.

Higher Price 

The purchases come despite U.S. soybeans being priced higher than Brazilian supplies.

China paid around $2.3 per bushel over the January Chicago futures contract SF26 for shipments from Gulf terminals and a premium of $2.2 per bushel from Pacific Northwest ports, well above the prices for Brazilian soybeans, which are around $1.8 per bushel over the January CBOT futures, traders said.

China, which had largely shunned U.S. soybeans for months amid a tense Washington–Beijing trade standoff, has stepped up purchases recently following late-October talks between the two countries’ leaders in South Korea.

Trade Commitments 

State-run grain buyer COFCO has led the buying, booking nearly 2 million tons of U.S. soybeans since late October, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture data.

The recent deals still remain well below the 12 million tons of purchases announced by the White House.

However, U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said on Tuesday Chinese purchases of American soybeans are “right on schedule,” citing an agreement for Beijing to buy 87.5 million tons of the U.S. product over the next three-and-a-half years.

(With inputs from Reuters)

+ posts