China is a big buyer of US soybeans. These farmers are bracing for tariff impact.

More than just clouds hang over Jeff Fisher’s farm here in central Illinois. High costs, low crop prices, and a stack of bills worry him. Tariffs and other possible retaliation from China, the key export market for Mr. Fisher’s soybeans, have boosted the usual uncertainty.

Spring planting is supposed to reinforce farmers’ innate optimism. This year, the mood is subdued.

“I’m getting squeezed from in front; I’m getting squeezed from behind. I’m getting squeezed a lot of times from the right, and sometimes I’m getting squeezed from the left,” says Mr. Fisher, sitting in his tractor, while intermittent rain keeps him from planting. “So which direction do you go to get some relief?”

Why We Wrote This

One reality of America’s current economic uncertainty, caused partly by tariffs, is that farmers are having to adjust plans for this year without knowing what supplies and prices will be.

The stress runs especially high here in Illinois, the United States’ No. 1 soybean-producing state. Soybean prices have fallen to four-year lows. The U.S. Department of Agriculture forecasts that the average farmer will lose $100 for every acre of soybeans they plant. The same holds true for corn, but soybeans are far more vulnerable to trade retaliation. The U.S. exports about 15% of its corn; for soybeans, it’s roughly half. Most of those go to a single customer: China.

Those losses could grow due to new tariffs. China, which last year bought $12.8 billion of American soybeans, has now imposed new duties. That’s more than doubled the cost for Chinese processors who buy from the U.S. Instead, they’re buying increasingly from South America, particularly Brazil, already the world’s No. 1 soybean exporter.

Man in gray T-shirt and jeans stands next to a newly plowed field.

Laurent Belsie/The Christian Science Monitor

Jeff Fisher, a farmer in Tolono, Illinois, examines one of his newly planted soybean fields.

Next year, Brazil is expected to increase production. U.S. producers, by contrast, will struggle to maintain their export volumes, economists say. The industry is looking to increase nonfeed uses of soybeans, including biodiesel and plastics.

If the U.S.-China trade war drags on, “There is the potential to get quite a bit worse on the price side,” says Scott Gerlt, chief economist at the American Soybean Association in St. Louis. He estimates that current Chinese tariffs could slice an extra 50 cents off the already low price of soybeans. They’re currently hovering around $10 per bushel. If Chinese tariffs escalate, the impact could be a full dollar discount on prices, he adds, due to weakened Chinese demand putting downward pressure on prices.

Source link

Related Posts

No Content Available