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El Nino Could Give China a Trade War Boost

El Nino Offers New Year's Gift for China in Trade War With U.S.

(Bloomberg) -- The weather is favoring China in its trade war with the U.S.

Thanks to the El Nino phenomenon, Brazil may be able to supply more soybeans than usual in January, helping feed China’s appetite for the oilseed as buyers in the Asian nation snub made-in-America crops. Japan’s weather agency said on Friday El Nino had emerged and it sees a 70 percent chance of the event continuing through spring.

Conditions were favorable in early planting in Mato Grosso, Brazil’s top soybean-producing state. The outlook also bodes well for the second half of December, when the harvest of early varieties starts, Celso Oliveira, a meteorologist at Somar in Sao Paulo, said by telephone. El Nino signals lighter and shorter downpours in the December-February harvest.

“We may see some rains, but with favorable sunny days to reap soybeans and to plant the second crop,” Oliveira said.

In the first nine months of the year as U.S.-China trade tensions escalated, Brazil shipped 15 percent more soy to China than it did in all of 2017, according to Brazil Trade Ministry data.

With seeding in Mato Grosso almost done, farmers may start collecting beans from the new crop before Christmas rather than right at the end of the year as they do normally, Daniele Siqueira, an analyst at Curitiba-based AgRural consultancy, said by phone. That means more of the oilseed will be harvested by the end of January than normal.

China Soybean Imports Rise With Brazil Seen as Biggest Winner

“As the seeding pace is at record levels, we’ll probably see above-average volumes harvested in January if the weather’s favorable for field works,” she said.

Farmers able to deliver soybeans in January tend to get better prices than in subsequent months. In October, producers sold soy for delivery in January at prices as much as 2.8 percent higher than for delivery in February, Siqueira said.

El Nino Could Give China a Trade War Boost

Chicago soybean prices are down about 9 percent this year to near decade lows as the tit-for-tat tariffs between the world’s two largest economies coincide with bumper crops. Brazilian farmers are being shielded by a surge in premiums paid for its oilseed.

To contact the reporter on this story: Fabiana Batista in Sao Paulo at fbatista6@bloomberg.net

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

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