INTERNATIONAL
China buys two cargoes of US wheat after leaders' meeting, traders say
China bought two US wheat cargoes totaling 120,000 tons for December shipment after last week's leader-level meeting. - REUTERS/Filepic
BEIJING: China has booked two cargoes of U.S. wheat following last week's meeting between the countries’ leaders, traders said on Thursday, the first such purchases since October last year, signalling easing trade tensions between Washington and Beijing.
AI Brief
Investors welcomed the meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping in South Korea, which helped ease concerns over the trade dispute between the world's two largest economies that had disrupted flows of goods including key agricultural products.
Beijing on Wednesday announced that from November 10 it would scrap tariffs that it had announced on March 4 for some U.S. agricultural goods. The move includes removing a 15% duty on U.S. wheat.
The purchases of around 120,000 metric tons for December shipment include one cargo of U.S. soft white wheat and one of spring wheat, the sources said.
"This is more of China showing commitment to buy U.S. grains as U.S. wheat is not the cheapest wheat around," said one Singapore-based grains trader who has direct knowledge of these deals. "So it is more of political move to buy these cargoes."
China, the top market for U.S. farmers, has turned its vast appetite for U.S. crops into a powerful trade war bargaining chip.
After several rounds of tit-for-tat tariffs, Chinese buyers have largely avoided U.S. farm goods, including wheat and soybeans, in favour of other supplies.
China imported 1.9 million tons of U.S. wheat in 2024, making up 17% of its total imports.
However, China has reduced overall wheat imports this year following large harvests. Wheat imports in January-September dropped 72% from the same period last year.
In another positive sign on the trade front, a shipment of sorghum has been sent from the U.S. to China since Trump and Xi met, the chairman of the U.S. Grains and BioProducts Council, Mark Wilson, told Reuters.
The U.S. shipped 5.7 million tons of sorghum to China in 2024, accounting for 66% of its sorghum imports.
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AI Brief
- China purchased 120,000 tons of US wheat, the first such deal since October last year, after a Trump-Xi meeting.
- Beijing will scrap some agricultural tariffs, including a 15% duty on US wheat, starting November 10.
- The move signals easing trade tensions, though China's overall wheat imports are down due to strong domestic harvests.
Investors welcomed the meeting between U.S. President Donald Trump and Chinese leader Xi Jinping in South Korea, which helped ease concerns over the trade dispute between the world's two largest economies that had disrupted flows of goods including key agricultural products.
Beijing on Wednesday announced that from November 10 it would scrap tariffs that it had announced on March 4 for some U.S. agricultural goods. The move includes removing a 15% duty on U.S. wheat.
The purchases of around 120,000 metric tons for December shipment include one cargo of U.S. soft white wheat and one of spring wheat, the sources said.
"This is more of China showing commitment to buy U.S. grains as U.S. wheat is not the cheapest wheat around," said one Singapore-based grains trader who has direct knowledge of these deals. "So it is more of political move to buy these cargoes."
China, the top market for U.S. farmers, has turned its vast appetite for U.S. crops into a powerful trade war bargaining chip.
After several rounds of tit-for-tat tariffs, Chinese buyers have largely avoided U.S. farm goods, including wheat and soybeans, in favour of other supplies.
China imported 1.9 million tons of U.S. wheat in 2024, making up 17% of its total imports.
However, China has reduced overall wheat imports this year following large harvests. Wheat imports in January-September dropped 72% from the same period last year.
In another positive sign on the trade front, a shipment of sorghum has been sent from the U.S. to China since Trump and Xi met, the chairman of the U.S. Grains and BioProducts Council, Mark Wilson, told Reuters.
The U.S. shipped 5.7 million tons of sorghum to China in 2024, accounting for 66% of its sorghum imports.
Your gateway to global news, insights, and stories that matter.