China said targeting Australian barley

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Published: April 25, 2019

SYDNEY, Aus. (Reuters) — Trade tensions with China are partly to blame for Australia’s GrainCorp Ltd. taking a A$40 million hit to half-year earnings.

The country’s largest listed agribusiness did not give further details, but industry sources said there had been a slowdown in Chinese demand for barley as Beijing considers whether to introduce tariffs on Australian supplies.

“The investigation has heightened uncertainty,” said one grain trader.

“China is still unloading vessels but the market is concerned that tariffs could be introduced at any time.”

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In a statement to the Australian stock exchange, the company said a disruption to grain trading conditions in the last six weeks to the end of March would reduce expected half-year earnings before interest, tax, depreciation and amortization by A$40 million.

China late last year launched two probes into whether Australian barley was dumped into China and whether Canberra has subsidized sales — allegations widely seen as politically motivated.

Australia is by far China’s top supplier of barley, used both in brewing and livestock feed.

It exported 6.48 million tonnes in 2017, close to three-quarters of China’s roughly 8.86 million tonnes of imports of the grain, worth about $1.5 billion, according to Chinese customs.

The probes follow a period of tense relations between Australia and China, including allegations by Canberra of interference in domestic affairs, jostling for influence in the Pacific and a move to block China’s Huawei Technologies from building a 5G network.

GrainCorp also said ongoing drought in eastern Australia significantly affected summer crop production, especially sorghum.

The adverse weather shows little sign of abating with Australia’s weather bureau forecasting a 70 percent chance of an El Nino developing later this year, bringing hot, dry weather across the country’s east coast.

The hit to earnings comes as GrainCorp plans a significant restructuring after receiving a $2.38 billion take-over approach late last year.

The company earlier this month said it would separate into two, spinning off and listing its global malting unit and restructuring its drought-hit grain business.

GrainCorp said at the time that it was still engaging with suitors vying for parts or all of the company.

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