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China corn: Market awaits Brazilian supplies

  • Spanish Market: Agriculture
  • 04/11/22

China's general administration of customs (GACC) has given access to some Brazilian traders to export corn to the country, increasing market participants' interest in corn flows from the South American country.

The GACC published the list of approved traders on 2 November, with 136 Brazilian traders, cooperatives and facilities granted permission to export corn to China. Around 600 Brazilian entities have requested certification. More Brazilian entities could get access to corn exports in December and January, as inspection work is ongoing.

Market participants have welcomed the approvals as both Brazilian exporters and Chinese buyers have awaited corn flows from Brazil - the world's second largest corn supplier after the US – ever since the governments of the two countries signed an agreement in May on grain imports, sanitary requirements and quarantine rules.

The first vessel is likely to be shipped later this year or in January 2023, market participants said. Some Brazilian exporters have started to offer China-bound cfr prices, at $348-350/t for December shipment and $345-346/t for January.

Brazil-origin products were price-competitive against US corn, with offers from the US pegged at $400-408/t and $390-395/t for December and January shipment, respectively on 3 November. Concerns have been raised about logistical problems in the US Gulf, caused by the low water level in the Mississippi river. Traders in the US have postponed export sales because of possible delivery delays, while China has cancelled US corn cargoes, eyeing cheaper Brazilian corn.

Prices in the Chinese domestic corn market rose by 10 yuan/t at north China ports from seven days earlier, settling in a range of Yn2,810-2,840/t ($390-394/t) in the week to 4 November, for new-harvested crops with 720 g/litre kernel weight and moisture below 14.5pc.

Corn harvesting has been completed in most regions of China, but trading firms continue to encounter logistical problems in transporting corn from the cropping areas to north ports because of Covid-19-related restrictions. Trading firms have failed to receive sufficient volumes of new-crop corn this week despite a strong harvest owing to transportation problems, which has tended to keep offers for existing stocks solid.

South China prices extended gains in the week to 4 November, rising by Yn20/t from the previous week to settle in a range of Yn2,970-2,990/t at Guangdong ports, with depleting port stocks combined with ramped-up deliveries from downstream users.

Corn processors focused on domestic crops because of firm prices for imported products. Corn use in animal feed rations continued to rise, further boosting corn demand and prices.


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