Agricultural Commodities May Be Hardest Hit By Trade War

 | Jun 29, 2018 01:15AM ET

by Moriah Costa

Soybean futures for August have plummeted to a two-year low since US President Donald Trump's trade war began in earnest. Indeed, agricultural commodities as a group have slumped.

Though Trump's opening salvo is barely remembered now—he imposed tariffs on washing machines and solar panels in January—his next move, levies in March on aluminum and steel imports from trading partners including China, the EU and Canada, raised the stakes and put the focus squarely on losses to US businesses.

But since April 4, when China, followed in late May by such allies as the EU, Canada and Mexico among others, retaliated with a roster of their own tariffs aimed at US goods, another, less closely watched sector of the US's economy has been pummeled: agricultural commodities.

Among the $50 billion in US goods that China targeted in its first retaliatory round, soybeans were conspicuous.