Everything You Need to Know About the U.S.-China Soybean Panic

Everything You Need to Know About the U.S.-China Soybean Panic


Soybeans (ZSX25), a key component of animal and human food products, have emerged at the center of the U.S.-China trade war, uniting farmers, commodity futures traders, and even hobbyist market watchers in fresh panic.

Essentially, a perfect storm is brewing for soybeans, which are the second-largest crop in the U.S., making them of key importance to farmers. Weather conditions in 2025 have set the stage for record crop outputs, but the demand side of the equation is falling worse-than-flat.

That’s because China is typically responsible for around half of all U.S. soybean exports. But this year, China hasn’t bought any U.S. soybeans.

This decision, painful for farmers and worrisome for futures traders, stems from tariffs that President Donald Trump levied on major trading partners like China earlier in the year. In response, China levied its own 20% retaliatory tariffs on U.S. goods, which, combined with other import fees, have placed the overall duty rate on U.S. soybeans at 34%. Trade relations remain icy in the absence of a U.S.-China trade deal, and China isn’t willing to pay up for U.S. soybeans in the meantime.

And it’s not that China is simply going without. Making matters worse is the fact that China appears all too willing to source soybeans from South American countries like Argentina and Brazil, and that those countries have rapidly growing soybean infrastructure. Recent reports that China purchased the “majority” of 40 soybean cargoes from Argentina created fresh fear for farmers and traders.

With many pointing their fingers at the trade situation, and the American Soybean Association advocating for a U.S.-China trade deal, Trump says soybeans will be a “major topic of discussion” at an upcoming meeting he will attend with Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Trump also said that his administration plans to use a “portion” of the revenue it has generated from tariffs to support American farmers. Other reports suggest that this bailout could total at least $10 billion. The president has promised to “make soybeans, and other row crops, great again” but Barchart’s agriculture experts remain split on just what will come next.


finance.yahoo.com
#U.S.China #Soybean #Panic

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