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Soy beans are being loaded into Chris Crosskno’s truck on Wednesday, October 11, 2017, at his farm near Denton, Missouri in the US. Photo: St. Louis Post-Dispatch/TNS

China is said to be resuming imports of US liquefied gas and soybeans amid trade war truce

  • It wasn’t clear if the preparations meant China would cut the retaliatory tariffs imposed on those products
  • It is possible that Beijing could reimburse buyers for tariffs they have paid
Commodities

Chinese officials have begun preparing to restart imports of US soybeans and liquefied natural gas, the first sign confirming the claims of President Donald Trump and the White House that China had agreed to start buying some US products “immediately”.

Chinese officials have been told to take necessary steps for the purchases, according to two officials with knowledge of the discussions. It wasn’t clear whether the preparations meant China would cut the retaliatory tariffs it imposed on those products, or when the purchases would happen.

It is possible that Beijing could reimburse buyers for the tariffs they pay, as they have done for purchases for the state soybean reserve.

Chinese purchases of the goods collapsed after Beijing imposed tariffs on them in retaliation for US import taxes. The two nations agreed to temporarily halt the spiralling exchange of tariffs over the weekend, promising to try and iron out their differences by the start of March next year.

China’s Ministry of Commerce did not respond to phone calls and a faxed request to comment.

Chinese imports of American soybeans fell 95 per cent in October compared to last year, damaging the prospects of Midwest farmers who are in the middle of harvest. Even if the tariffs are lifted now, the US crop is becoming less competitive in the Chinese market as the harvest season approaches in South America.

America has probably already missed its best chance to sell soybeans to China, according to Cargill, one of the world’s biggest agriculture commodity traders.

US liquefied natural gas was also absent from China’s shopping list in October, following Beijing’s move in September to impose a retaliatory 10 per cent tariff on US supplies.

Even so, Asia’s biggest gas consumer imported at least one US cargo in November, according to vessel-tracking data compiled by Bloomberg, and there’s another en route.

Heading into winter, Australia, Turkmenistan and Qatar were China’s top gas suppliers, according to customs.

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