World Trade Suffers Biggest Collapse Since Financial Crises
The recent collapse in world trade volume is the worst since the financial crisis and as dangerous as during the dot-com bubble of the early 2000s, according to The Telegraph. Data from the CPB Netherlands Bureau for Economic Policy Analysis revealed that world trade volume dropped 1.8% in the three months to January compared to the preceding three months as a synchronized global downturn gained momentum.
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U.S.
Soybean Exports Plunge, No Recovery In Sight, Farmers Are Concerned
About Tariff Man
17
April, 2019
Despite
earlier good news on the US-China trade deficit, U.S. soybean exports
have plunged to their lowest levels since the early days of the
U.S.-China trade war in what is an alarming sign for farmers pleading
with the Trump administration to resolve all trade disputes.
Current
data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) revealed that the
total U.S. soybean exports reached 460,700 metric tons last week,
down from 888,700 tons in the previous week and just above 446,500
tons in the same week a year ago. Of the soybean shipments last week,
only 130,200 tons were loaded on vessels for China.
The
implementation of U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods last summer spurred
Beijing to abandon U.S. farmers for South American growers,
cultivating links with Argentina and Brazil.
American
farmers are expected to plant less soybean this year, down 5% to 84.6
million acres according to the USDA, and Chinese feed demand is
likely to collapse amid the outbreak of African Swine Fever across
several provinces.
This
means that "even if an agreement was reached between China and
the USA, a return to the quantities of soybeans traded before the
outbreak of the dispute would be highly unlikely," said
Germany’s Commerzbank.
The
continuing trade dispute has caused bilateral trade between both
countries to almost collapse. Total U.S. exports of soybeans globally
fell 28% y/y in March compared with the same 12-month period in
2017-2018, at 30 million mt, down from 41.6 million mt.
American
growers are troubled by indications that the administration would
accept Chinese purchase target pledges for soybean without a
commitment to lift retaliatory tariffs, said industry
representatives, some of whom spoke only on condition of anonymity to
Bloomberg.
"This
is of great concern to producers out here facing another year of
tariffs," said Mark Powers, president of the Northwest
Horticultural Council, which represents cherry, pear and apple
growers in the Pacific Northwest. "We’re disappointed. Clearly
the priority lies elsewhere."
Farmers
are disturbed by Trump’s interest in tariffs that are destroying
free markets while his administration gets to pick industry winners
and losers. This is more of a command and control market - some
farmers suggested.
Despite
being close to a deal for five months, soybean exports continue to
plunge as farmers lose confidence in the administration to "Make
American Great Again."
What's
next? Well, farm bankruptcy filings have exploded across 19 states,
particularly in the upper Midwest -- some of these farmers are
sitting on record stockpiles of soybeans - as demand for the beans
disappears.
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