Today (Nov 17), the market for grains in China is shown as follows:
Corn:
Corn prices in China keep rising today. And the average price is 2,454 CNY/tonne nationwide, up 7 CNY/tonne from last Friday. The price among deep-processing enterprises in Shandong prevails at 2,460-2,600 CNY/tonne with most increase of 10-40 CNY/tonne from yesterday. At Jinzhou port, Liaoning, new season corn with volume weight of 720 g/L (moisture within 15%, impurity with 1%, mildew with 2%) is priced at 2,515 CNY/tonne, flat from yesterday. At Bayuquan port, Liaoning, Grade-II new corn of 2020 with volume weight of 720 g/L (moisture within 15%, impurity with 1%, mildew with 2%) is priced at 2,510 CNY/tonne, up 5 CNY/tonne from yesterday. At Guangdong port, Grade-II old corn price is offered at 2,580-2,600 CNY/tonne. And some traders offer the price still at 2,570 CNY/tonne. Tiancheng Group in Siping, Jilin offers the price of Grade-III new corn at 2,380 CNY/tonne, a rise of 40 CNY/tonne from yesterday. The purchasing price of Grade-III new corn offered by Longfeng company in Suihua Qinggang, Heilongjiang is 2,290 CNY/tonne, up 10 CNY/tonne from yesterday.
Farmers are more hesitant to make sales of corn due to a consecutive drop in price and rainy weather in North China. There are 326 trucks waiting to get unloaded in earlier morning in Shandong Province, down 208 trucks compared to the previous week. With less corn going marketing, some deep-processing enterprises further raise the price by 10-40 CNY/tonne from last Friday. If corn arrival keeps decreasing, the price will likely increase again. Besides, China’s corn market supply tightens due to a production reduction in main producing regions, coupled with reducing corn released under policies, so traders are bullish about the market outlook and start to build storage to hoard corn. The floor price of corn rotation in Northeast area is relatively high, which also offers bottom support. Corn prices at Southern and Northern ports boost by 5-20 CNY/tonne. The overall corn market will maintain the high level, and participants can pay attention to new corn sales and sales mentality.
Sorghum:
New domestic sorghum prices are stable with a partial decline today. As new sorghum planted area and production suffer a reduction under the influence of typhoons this year and an expansion in other crops, its starting prices hit a historical high and farmers show strong sentiment in propping up prices. Markets in main producing provinces of Shanxi, Inner Mongolia and Jilin have strong sentiment for higher prices. Moreover, distillery owners have to make purchases for daily requirements. In addition, grain depots are strict about crop moisture with the marketing of new sorghum, which also highlights its quality and prices. These combine to drive sorghum prices to continue rises. But traders and grain depots are cautious due to high prices, so that sorghum shipments are at a slow pace, which is weighing down the market.
Imported sorghum prices steady in China today. Market participants are concerned that escalating U.S.-China tensions could affect future imports of sorghum. Moreover, new U.S. sorghum crops are still under harvests, and the cost of importing sorghum is also strengthening due to the coronavirus pandemic. In addition, domestic holders now have small stocks of Australian sorghum amid tensions between China and Australia. However, imported sorghum stocks at Guangdong ports still total 75,000 tonnes as of Nov 13. And an expected rise in sorghum arrivals will probably weigh down US sorghum prices in China. Participants can focus on US-China relations.
Barley:
Imported barley prices steady with a partial decline today. China has halted barley imports from Australia’s largest grain exporter whose shipments were found with pests on multiple occasions, further disrupting barley trade between these two nations. Moreover, some domestic feed manufacturers also start using barley as corn prices remain high, which also bolsters barley prices. Merely, imported barley stocks totaled 568,000 tonnes at Guangdong ports as of Nov 13. While there will be vessels arriving gradually in coming months, the overall demand remains weak, which will be negative to the market. In addition, barley shipments from Argentina, Canada and France have been flowing toward China as a conflict between China and Australia reshapes global trade pattern, which is also undermining domestic barley market. Overall, imported barley prices are predicted to stay stable in China.
(USD $1=CNY ¥6.58)