China’s soymeal and soyoil stocks rebound on higher crush, weak demand. 17 minutes ago | Cai Chen. Soymeal stocks and soyoil at Chinese crushers rebounded in the week to April 10, as outputs increased amid higher crushing... Already subscribing?
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina''s soybean imports from Brazil slipped in June from a year earlier, customs data showed on Tuesday, as poor crushing margins weighed on demand.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina''s demand for soybeans is likely to remain slow until May amid weak crush margins, which is expected to pressure exports from the US and Brazil, market sources said March 24.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteNew Delhi — China''s demand for soybeans has slowed down in recent days amid prolonged negative net crush margins, market sources said March 3. Crushers in China, the world''s largest soybean and pork consumer, have been reluctant to purchase beans shipments as demand for soymeal-based animal feed has plummeted after the Lunar New Year celebrations, sources […]
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina imported fewer soybeans in March than a year earlier, customs data showed on Wednesday, as bad weather delayed exports from Brazil and poor crush margins curbed demand.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina''s demand for soybeans is likely to remain slow until May amid weak crush margins, which is expected to pressure exports from the US and Brazil, market sources said March 24.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteSome soybean crushing plants across China from north to south regions are in or have planned suspensions to operations, industry sources told Fastmarkets Agricensus. The shutdown came as deteriorated domestic crush margins heavily weighed on Chinese buyers’ buying interests for soybeans, causing shortages of the oilseed in oil plants.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteSoybean crush margins in China have turned negative for the first time since early August, pressured by lower demand for the soymeal they churn out following an outbreak of African swine fever and
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteSoybean crush margins in China have turned negative for the first time since early August, pressured by lower demand for the soymeal they churn out following an outbreak of African swine fever and
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteSoybean crush margins in China have turned negative for the first time since early August, pressured by lower demand for the soymeal they churn out following an outbreak of African swine fever and
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteBEIJING, July 20 (Reuters)
Soybean crush margins in China lost more than $20/mt across the curve in the past week with the gross margin for May shipments of Brazilian beans at around negative $3/mt, with US beans for the same window at minus $30/mt. The wash-outs came against the backdrop of weak soyoil futures in China with May futures on Dalian Commodity Exchange down
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina''s soybean oil prices hit a near 10-year peak this week on tight supply and robust demand, lifting key soybean crushing margins to six-month highs despite sustained weak demand for soymeal
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChinese buying of soybean cargoes from Brazil and the US plunged last week as crush margins for shipments in the second quarter of 2022 worsened sharply. Fewer than five soybean cargoes were sold to China last week, more than 50% lower than the volume in the week before, according to sources. Gross margins for shipments…
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina’s soybean crush margin weakens Soybean import tariffs and a decline in renminbi value have hurt profitability for Chinese soybean crushers. China historically has imported soybeans to crush to satisfy domestic soybean meal needs, but under current market conditions China may be more open toward importing soybean meal instead.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina''s soybean crush margins worsen. China''s soybean crush margins have slid since mid-December, taking direction from rising import costs from Brazil, although partially offset by the upward trend in Dalian-listed soymeal and soyoil futures. Board crush margins for soybeans delivered to China have steadily fallen since mid-December, following
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteMonthly average for China Soybean Gross Crush margin in March was assessed at $1.98/mt, compared with $28.13/mt and $16.59/mt in January and February, respectively, Platts data showed. According to the local crushers, once the gross margins fall below $20/mt threshold, losses start to pile up.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteFor the 2020-21 marketing year (October 2020-September 2021), China Soybean Gross Crush margin for April shipment was assessed at $8.06/mt March 2, compared with the pre-holiday level of $20.75/mt Feb. 10, according to S&P Global Platts data.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina soybean crush margins at 1-month high on soymeal demand 20 Jul 2020 | Johnny Huang Crush margins in China for shipments of US and Brazilian soybeans rose to their highest in nearly a month, with strong...
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A Quote(Adds detail, data)BEIJING, April 13 (Reuters)
Chinese prices of soybean meal rose from the beginning of the year to record highs late in March, as supplies of beans tightened after drought hit the crop in top supplier Brazil, delaying its harvest, though prices later fell from the peak. Crushers were also slow in making purchases as poor hog margins weighed on crush margins, said traders.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina''s soybean imports from Brazil slipped in June from a year earlier, customs data showed on Tuesday, as poor crushing margins weighed on demand.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteNew Delhi — China''s demand for soybeans has slowed down in recent days amid prolonged negative net crush margins, market sources said March 3. Crushers in China, the world''s largest soybean and pork consumer, have been reluctant to purchase beans shipments as demand for soymeal-based animal feed has plummeted after the Lunar New Year celebrations, sources […]
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteSoybean crush margins in China lost more than $20/mt across the curve in the past week with the gross margin for May shipments of Brazilian beans at around negative $3/mt, with US beans for the same window at minus $30/mt. The wash-outs came against the backdrop of weak soyoil futures in China with May futures on Dalian Commodity Exchange down
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina washed out at least five Brazilian soybean cargoes from the beginning of last week up to Monday, February 14, Fastmarkets Agricensus has confirmed.. Several sources, both in Brazil and China, told Fastmarkets Agricensus that Chinese crushers were heard breaching soybean contracts due to the combination of surging CBOT futures, skyrocketing Brazilian FOB premiums and negative crush
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina imported fewer soybeans in March than a year earlier, customs data showed on Wednesday, as bad weather delayed exports from Brazil and poor crush margins curbed demand.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina’s soymeal and soyoil stocks rebound on higher crush, weak demand. 17 minutes ago | Cai Chen. Soymeal stocks and soyoil at Chinese crushers rebounded in the week to April 10, as outputs increased amid higher crushing... Already subscribing?
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina’s soybean crush margins worsen. China''s soybean crush margins have slid since mid-December, taking direction from rising import costs from Brazil, although partially offset by the upward trend in Dalian-listed soymeal and soyoil futures. Board crush margins for soybeans delivered to China have steadily fallen since mid-December
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteBoard crush margins for soybeans delivered to China have steadily fallen since mid-December, following rising import costs of Brazilian products, on the account of higher soybean […] China''s soybean crush margins have slid since mid-December, taking direction from rising import costs from Brazil, although partially offset by the upward trend in Dalian-listed soymeal and soyoil futures.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteBEIJING, CHINA — China’s soybean imports reached an annual record in 2020, increasing 13% as crushing margins improved and demand from the pig sector increased, Reuters reported. China purchased 100.33 million tonnes of soybeans in 2020, up from 88.51 million tonnes, according to the General Administration of Customs.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteRaw soybean prices have gained over 40% on the year, which has put a lot of pressure on the crush margin, a China-based crusher said. According to S&P Global Platts, SOYBEX CFR China for October deliveries were assessed at $618.03/mt Sept. 3, up $176/mt year on year.
WhatsAppGet PriceGet A QuoteChina imported fewer soybeans in March than a year earlier, customs data showed on Wednesday, as bad weather delayed exports from Brazil and poor crush margins curbed demand.
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