Soybean market still figuring out implications of China-U.S. pact

It’s still not clear if the 12 million tonne target for 2025 includes the 5.9 million tonnes sent to China earlier in the year.

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Published: 13 hours ago

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Pods on a soybean plant in a field near Selkirk, Manitoba in late August, 2024.

SASKATOON — Soybean futures had an up-and-down session the day following the announcement of a long-awaited agreement between the United States and China.

The January contract ended the session up 1.2 per cent from the previous day after yo-yoing all over the place as the market digested the implications of the new pact.

“It took a wild ride as traders tried to decide, is the glass half full or half empty?” said Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist with StoneX.

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China has agreed to buy a minimum of 12 million tonnes of U.S. soybeans in 2025, and a minimum of 25 million tonnes in each of the next three years.

To put that in perspective, China had typically been purchasing 25 to 30 million tonnes from the United States in recent years, but shipments dried up in recent months due to a trade spat between the two countries.

The market is trying to figure out if the 12 million tonne target for 2025 includes the 5.9 million tonnes sent to China earlier in the year.

If that is the case, then total U.S. exports for the 2025-26 crop year will fall well short of the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s target of 45.86 million tonnes.

Under that scenario, Suderman thinks U.S. ending stocks could blossom to 10.89 million tonnes, well above the USDA’s forecast of 8.17 million tonnes.

However, if the 12 million tonnes is all new business, that is a far more bullish scenario.

Suderman assumes most of the 25 million tonnes in imports that will occur in each of the next three years will happen during the fourth quarter of those years, when Brazil is out of the market.

But if some of next year’s 25 million tonnes gets pulled forward into early 2026, it would make the 2025-26 balance sheet much tighter, and the soybean market would suddenly be vulnerable to any big weather scare in the southern or northern hemispheres.

Suderman said the bottom line is that U.S. president Donald Trump’s administration has secured a commitment from China to buy at least 87 million tonnes of soybeans between now and the end of 2028.

He figures that is about 75 million tonnes more than U.S. farmers and exporters would have secured without an agreement.

“From that standpoint, I think it’s a good deal,” he said.

He thinks the pact will tide the U.S. over until it can build more domestic crush capacity to feed its burgeoning biodiesel, renewable diesel and sustainable aviation fuel sectors.

Suderman thinks the U.S. soybeans will be used to build China’s reserves. Brazil’s beans are too wet for that purpose.

He also thinks China intends to create a massive stockpile of soybeans so that once Trump is out of office, they can once again shut the U.S. out of their marketplace.

About the author

Sean Pratt

Sean Pratt

Reporter/Analyst

Sean Pratt has been working at The Western Producer since 1993 after graduating from the University of Regina’s School of Journalism. Sean also has a Bachelor of Commerce degree from the University of Saskatchewan and worked in a bank for a few years before switching careers. Sean primarily writes markets and policy stories about the grain industry and has attended more than 100 conferences over the past three decades. He has received awards from the Canadian Farm Writers Federation, North American Agricultural Journalists and the American Agricultural Editors Association.

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