Trade War Weighs On U.S. Agriculture, Brazil-Argentina Wins

 | Sep 10, 2019 10:47PM ET

China is one of the world’s biggest importers of agricultural products, a significant portion of which comes from the United States each year. But, China has trimmed the import of farm products from the United States due to rising trade tensions.

This has affected the U.S. agriculture sector as farmers keep building crop inventories and companies halt production due to lower demand. Meanwhile, China has now turned to South American countries like Brazil and Argentina instead of U.S. producers for soy.

Trade War Hurts U.S. Agriculture

Per a report from American Farm Bureau, China imported $19.5 billion farm products from the United States in 2017, which reduced to $9.1 billion in 2018 due to the trade war. Since March 2018, the tariff war has resulted in an 18% drop in soy prices.

In fact, the shipment of U.S. soybeans to China sank to a 16-year low in 2018, as China shifted purchase to Brazil and other South American producers.

Trade terms worsened in second-quarter 2019 as China reduced purchase of agricultural products from the United States as Trump’s administration blacklisted Huawei and other Chinese technology firms citing security violations and increased tariffs on products.

In spite of the tensions, trade talks resumed in July but failed as China insisted on the removal of additional tariff and lifting the ban on Huawei. Instead of going into any further negotiation Trump imposed additional tariffs and Beijing in retaliation levied higher duties and stopped agricultural purchases from the United States.

On Sep 1, Trump imposed an additional 15% tariff on $125 billion of Chinese goods citing that China is manipulating the fall in its currency. China retaliated by imposing extra tariffs of 5% and 10% on 1,717 products and filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization over U.S. import duties for violating the consensus reached by both the countries in Osaka, Japan.

The trade tussle has not only put farmers in a disadvantageous position but has also eaten into the profit margins of U.S. agricultural companies.

For instance, Deere & Company (NYSE:DE) that produces agricultural machinery had to cut down production as American farmers are putting off equipment purchases due to declining sales and higher inventory levels. During the fiscal third-quarter earnings report, Deere had reported a drop in revenues at its agricultural and turf segment. Sales at the United States and Canada segment accounted for 60% of Deere’s total sales.

AGCO Corporation (NYSE:AGCO) and CNH Industrial N.V. (NYSE:CNHI) , both agricultural machine makers, had to slash production to balance inventory and retail demand. AGCO carries a Zacks Rank #2 (Buy). You can see Zacks Investment Research

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