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China receives the first shipment of Argentine soy meal since import approval in 2019

Two China-based traders confirmed that a cargo of Argentine soymeal had cleared Chinese customs. This is the first shipment since Beijing authorized such imports in 2019. It also signals a new trading channel with the top exporter of soybean meal.

According to NABSA's and LSEG's ship tracking data, the Sumatra ship, which was carrying 30,000 metric tonnes of Argentine soy meal, left Argentina in September. It arrived in Nansha, a port in southern Guangdong Province, in late October.

One source familiar with the situation said, "The cargo cleared customs."

Mysteel, a consultancy, said in a Tuesday note that the Argentinean soymeal had entered the market at "highly competitive prices" and with good quality.

China is the largest consumer of animal feeds rich in protein, but it produces the majority of them by crushing soybeans imported primarily from Brazil and the United States.

Argentina is one of the top exporters of soy meal and oil in the world.

Earlier, it was reported that Chinese feedmakers purchased three Argentinean soymeal shipments to diversify their supply in anticipation of possible disruptions due to the U.S./China trade war.

Bunge, a U.S. grains dealer, sold all three loads. Bunge had sent a soybean meal shipment to China in July but diverted it later to Vietnam, citing "commercial reasons".

It did not respond immediately to a comment request.

China is currently dealing with a glut of soybeans after months of record imports. Buyers feared that if the ongoing trade war with Washington continued, they would be left shortchanged.

Johnny Xiang of Beijing's AgRadar Consulting said that clearing customs confirmed the opening of a new trading route. If the price is right, and quality does not matter, then future purchases are still possible. Reporting by Ella Cao and Naveen Thupkral, both in Beijing; editing by Joe Bavier

(source: Reuters)