U.S. grains: Soybeans mixed on doubts over Chinese demand

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Reuters
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The Chicago Board of Trade building on May 28, 2018. (Harmantasdc/iStock Editorial/Getty Images)

Reuters — U.S. soybean futures were mixed at Friday’s close at the end of a see-saw week during which Chinese purchases of U.S. supplies pushed prices to a 17-month high before doubts about whether China would sustain such buying punctured the rally.

Corn and wheat futures held near unchanged.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture this week confirmed that China bought more than 1.5 million tonnes of American soybeans. Traders said they had largely expected deals of that size before the USDA reported them, and they had factored China’s buying into the market already.

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“They buy, and it’s already behind us,” said Don Roose, president of U.S. Commodities in Iowa.

The January soybean contract on the Chicago Board of Trade was 2-1/2 cents higher at $11.25 a bushel at the close. That was down from Tuesday’s peak of $11.69-1/2, the highest since June 2024.

China’s soybean purchases remain far off the 12 million tonnes that U.S. officials said it promised to buy by year-end. The U.S. also faces tough competition for global export sales from cheaper soybeans in Brazil, analysts said.

Some traders said China could bear the cost of making larger purchases of U.S. soybeans in order to preserve the trade truce agreed with Washington in late October but expected the market to remain cautious until volumes are confirmed.

“We wouldn’t be surprised if Chinese purchases from the U.S. are closer to a trickle than a flood,” said Rod Baker, an analyst at Bendigo Agribusiness Insights.

The USDA reported on Thursday that China also bought 132,000 tonnes of U.S. white wheat. The deal failed to spark a strong rally in CBOT wheat futures as global supplies were plentiful, traders said.

CBOT March wheat was down one cent at $5.39 a bushel, while March corn futures dipped 1/4 cent to $4.37-1/2 a bushel.

— Reporting by Tom Polansek, Peter Hobson and Gus Trompiz

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