China pays high prices to buy 81% of Brazil’s October soybeans

The Asian agriculture giant bought 2.7 million tonnes of Brazilian soybeans last month

By Eduardo Tinti, price reporter for Fastmarkets AgriCensus

China bought 2.7 million tonnes of Brazilian soybeans in October, 81% of the South American country’s monthly exports and enough buying to contribute to lifting FOB prices to a multi-year high, official customs data showed.

Chinese purchases out of Brazil jumped 35% on the year as the main global soybean importer turned to South America to cover its spot demand amid logistic disruptions and delays in the US.

With the uptick in Chinese demand, Brazilian October exports jumped 36% on the year to 3.3 million tonnes considering all destination markets.

Other relevant importers in October were Spain, Vietnam, Thailand, Iran and Norway, each of which secured between 2% and 6% of Brazil’s exported volumes.

Brazilian beans exported in October were mainly originated from Rio Grande do Sul, which accounted for 40% of total volumes shipped.

The heated cash market came amid robust Chinese spot demand and boosted average FOB values to $522.54 per tonne, the highest level since January 2014 in nominal terms.

The historically high prices were underpinned by elevated basis premiums in the Brazilian cash market, especially in the end of September and beginning of October.

Moving into corn, Brazil’s October exports remained largely subdued on the year at 1.8 million tonnes due to the ongoing impact of the massive second crop safrinha production loss.

The crop loss affected primarily southern states, a fact that was also depicted by the loading location of October’s exports – with most of the volume mainly originating from Mato Grosso (57%), São Paulo (14%) and northern states (17%).

Meanwhile, Brazil imported 503,000 tonnes of corn in October, 51% from Argentina and 49% from Paraguay.

Residual volumes were also bought from the US and from Chile.

About 94% of total volumes imported in the month headed to southern states, another reflection of the major crop loss in this region.

From January to October, Brazil imported 2.1 million tonnes of corn, the highest volume for this period of the year in the whole custom office’s time series, starting in 1997.

Looking ahead, the pace of corn exports is expected to pick up somewhat while imported volumes edge lower as the domestic market is less tight than previously anticipated.

That has, in turn, contributed to dampen domestic prices towards export parity levels.
This article, by Eduardo Tinti, was originally published to agricensus.com on Monday November 8.

Stay up to date with the critical forces influencing price and market movements across the agriculture market. We look forward to regularly sharing more insights, trends and trade news with you on the Fastmarkets oilseeds and grains insights hub.

What to read next
Fastmarkets has corrected its AG-SYB-0078 Crush Margin China Soy (Brazil) M1 Yuan/mt; AG-SYB-0079 Crush Margin China Soy (US Gulf) M1 Yuan/mt; and AG-SYB-0082 Crush Margin US Soy M1 c$/bu for the period between December 2-13, 2024, which were published incorrectly due to a procedure lapse error. Fastmarkets has also corrected its AG-SYB-0078 Crush Margin China Soy (Brazil) M1 Yuan/mt and AG-SYB-0079 Crush Margin China Soy (US Gulf) M1 Yuan/mt for November 20 and November 29, 2024, which were published incorrectly due to a typo.
Fastmarkets will publish price assessments for US animal fats and oils, animal proteins, biomass-based diesel, hide and leather, grain and feed ingredients, organic/non-GMO and vegetable oils at 12:00pm Central time on Tuesday December 31 due to the early closure of the Chicago Mercantile Exchange (CME) ahead of the New Year holiday.
The recently concluded EU-Mercosur free-trade agreement, after 25 years of negotiation, is expected to have limited immediate impact on South American agricultural exports to Europe.
The French corn harvest advanced by 7 percentage points in the week to Monday November 25, with 89% of the total planted area now harvested, according to the latest weekly report from FranceAgriMer.
Fastmarkets has corrected its AG-SYB-0081 Crush Margin Argentina Soy, which was published incorrectly on Wednesday November 13.
Argentina’s soybean sowing area estimate for the 2024-25 crop was raised by 0.6%, to 17.9 million hectares, while the wheat output was projected at 17.6 million tonnes, the country's Secretariat of Agriculture, Livestock and Fisheries (SagyP) monthly report showed on Thursday November 21.