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Ships Steam to China With U.S. Cargoes as Tensions Escalate

Trade Tensions Put Spotlight on U.S. Cargoes Bound for China

(Bloomberg) -- As the U.S.-China trade war escalates, speculation is swirling over whether the Asian nation will honor purchases of American products including soybeans and cotton that are yet to be delivered.

At least 10 bulk carrier cargoes are in transit, while at least one vessel managed to offload its U.S. cargo on the weekend as tensions between Washington and Beijing flared.

Ships Steam to China With U.S. Cargoes as Tensions Escalate

Bulk carrier Fiji arrived in Dalian Sunday, waiting a week before congestion cleared to enter port. The cargo originated from Export Grain Terminal Longview in the Pacific Northwest with 67,113 metric tons of soybeans, according to U.S. Department of Agriculture and IHS shipping data analyzed by Bloomberg. China has bought about 7.4 million tons of U.S. soybeans that haven’t been shipped yet, USDA data show.

Another 468,000 tons of American corn, 103,000 tons of pork and 704,000 running bales of cotton also have been sold but not yet shipped to China, according to the USDA.

“The shipments of the sales on the books have been slow-walked recently,” said St. Louis-based independent analyst Ken Morrison. “The risk of possible cancellations just got higher.”

There is similar anxiety for U.S. cotton orders. “What we’ve sold to them, people are concerned they are not going to take that,” said Jody Campiche, vice president of economics and policy analysis for the National Cotton Council of America.

China on Monday announced higher tariffs on dozens of products, including soy-based biodiesel even though China has imported virtually none of the fuel from the U.S. this year. The increased levies are set to go into effect June 1.

“While the Chinese market is only a small, emerging one for U.S. biodiesel producers right now, the proposed tariffs add to the headwinds for our industry and U.S. soybean farmers,” Kurt Kovarik, vice president of federal affairs at the National Biodiesel Board, a trade group, said Monday in an emailed statement.

In the energy sector, a tanker of liquefied natural gas -- which has also been targeted with tariffs -- is also en route. The Iberica Knutsen left Cheniere Energy Inc.’s Sabine Pass terminal April 10 and is now headed for Taizhou, according to Genscape data. Kpler SAS, which tracks commodity shipments, said in an email that it interprets the vessel’s signal to show it’s actually heading to Taiwan, which would make more economic sense given the existing tariffs.

Supertanker Alsace is also steaming for China’s northeastern port of Qingdao, after loading up U.S. crude oil in the Caribbean. The ship received part of its West Texas Intermediate crude cargo while in the U.S. Virgin Islands and more off of Aruba. The tanker, which is carrying about 2 million barrels of oil, is set to reach its final destination May 21.

  • Click here for a table of USDA grain exports by country.
  • Click here for a list of U.S. LNG exports

--With assistance from Sheela Tobben, Shruti Date Singh, Christine Buurma and Mario Parker.

To contact the reporters on this story: Kevin Varley in Washington at kvarley@bloomberg.net;Michael Hirtzer in Chicago at mhirtzer@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Attwood at jattwood3@bloomberg.net, Pratish Narayanan

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.