Monday 21 Apr 2025
Asian buyers shun US farm goods, hit by ship crunch and trade war
09 Apr 2025, 04:47 pm
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SINGAPORE (April 9): Asian buyers are reducing purchases of US agricultural goods as Washington's planned fees on China-linked vessels and sweeping import duties on key regional trading partners stoke uncertainty and dampen appetite for American products.

China, which retaliated with 34% duties on US goods, is the largest importer of US agricultural products, but other Asian countries including Japan, South Korea and Thailand also buy significant volumes of US wheat, corn, and soybean meal.

President Donald Trump's plan to revive US shipbuilding using port fees of up to US$1.5 million (RM6.7 million) on China-linked ships has forced exporters to hunt for non-Chinese ships and, in turn, driven up freight costs, denting demand for US farm goods.

"It makes the US now an unattractive destination for over half of the world's fleet," said Kansas-based freight consultant Jay O'Neil.

Ship owners and operators are reluctant to provide quotes for US ports for April, May and June due to the looming fees, he said.

The shipping challenges and trade war uncertainties are likely to weigh on benchmark Chicago soybean and wheat futures, which are trading close to multi-month lows, traders said.

"As of now, most importers are not taking the risk of importing from the US," said a Singapore-based trader at an international company which sells US grains and oilseeds into Asia. "Shipping costs have gone up and there is so much uncertainty over the trade war."

US tariffs on dozens of countries took effect on Wednesday, including massive 104% duties on Chinese goods, even as the president prepared for negotiations with some nations.

Scarce shipping

Asia buys about 35% of wheat and corn shipped worldwide. For soybeans, China takes more than 60% of the oilseed traded globally.

While other Asian grain importers are not expected to retaliate against US tariffs, limited vessel availability and trade-war uncertainty are taking a toll on purchasing, traders said.

"We are trying to switch vessels for cargoes we had booked earlier to supply US wheat to Southeast Asia. We are having to pay higher freight to get a non-Chinese boat. So for now it is a big no to US grains," a second Singapore-based trader said.

Traditional US wheat buyers like Japan and South Korea are expected to continue purchasing American cargoes, however they may buy some corn and soybeans from alternative suppliers in South America and the Black Sea region.

"As of now, buying of US products has virtually stopped. But looking ahead, we expect Japan and South Korea to keep taking US wheat as they are committed to buying from the US," the second Singapore trader said.

It is difficult for buyers like Japan and South Korea to switch from US wheat as it is used for direct human consumption, but they can shift to alternative shipments for feed grains such as corn and soybeans.

Most Southeast Asia grain importers have yet to book about half of their requirement for May, the second Singapore trader said, leaving them vulnerable to supply shortfalls.

Mike Steenhoek, executive director of the Soy Transportation Coalition in the United States, said a prominent US exporter was unable to get bids from ocean vessel companies to ship soymeal because of the proposed fee on China-linked vessels.

"You're already seeing impact."

Uploaded by Magessan Varatharaja

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