What Do I Think of Recent US Soybean Sales?
By:
Barchart.com
November 19, 2025 at 12:49 PM EST
To borrow a quote from fictional Cleveland Indian radio announcer Harry Doyle (played by the late Bub Uecker, the real play-by-play announcer for the Milwaukee Brewers for more than 5 decades): In case you hadn’t noticed, and judging by the readership numbers you haven’t, I have been talking a lot about the soybean market lately. If I go back only as far as October 1, 2025, the day the US government was shut down and the world’s largest buyer got busy covering secondary supply needs under cover of darkness, I’ve written about the soybean market no less than 7 times[i]. Most recently, this past Monday when I discussed the question of, “What Spiked the Soybean Market – Again?”. The bottom line of all I’ve written over the past couple months is fundamentally the US soybean market hasn’t changed. That the latest “deal” between the US and China, brokered by the artist known as the US president himself, was a clear win for China in that it did not require the purchase of physical US soybean supplies, but rather could be filled by the purchase of futures contracts. Additionally, just likely the previous and similarly overhyped Phase One trade agreement from January 2020 the latest “deal” allowed China to buy from the most competitive market. And according to a comparison of soybeans from Brazilian ports and the US Port of New Orleans, it’s no contest with Brazil the lower priced. Given all this, what do I think of this week’s announced sales to China? For the record, Tuesday saw an announcement of 792,000 mt (29.1 mb) followed by Wednesday’s 330,000 mt (12.1) mb. To quote Twain; no, not the legendary writer and humorist Samuel Longhorn Clemens (aka Mark), but rather the songstress Eileen Regina Edwards (aka Shania), “That don’t impress me much…”. Due to the recent US government holiday – I mean shutdown – the latest official export sales and shipments numbers were through Thursday, September 25. (The next set will be released Thursday, November 20, if the government is still open.) Basically through the end of September:
A look back at the same week the previous marketing year:
Fast forward to what would usually be numbers for the week ending Thursday, November 13, and last year USDA reported for the week ending Thursday, November 14:
How did we know China got busy covering secondary supplies during a time of year when it normally buys some of its secondary supplies, and started shipping some of those secondary supply purchases while nothing was being reported:
I know what you are saying, “Basis firming is bullish! Bullish!! Bullish!!!” My answer, “Not necessarily. If we apply seasonal analysis we see:
The bottom bottom line then is this: What we have seen in the soybean market is not surprising, nor all that impressive. It is seasonal. We’ll see what happens next. [i] From November 6, November 2, October 31, October 27, October 15, and October 2. On the date of publication, Darin Newsom did not have (either directly or indirectly) positions in any of the securities mentioned in this article. All information and data in this article is solely for informational purposes. For more information please view the Barchart Disclosure Policy here.
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