With domestic crop damaged by rain, China searches far and wide for wheat

CHINA is scouring the globe for wheat, with annual imports on track to hit record levels, as buyers scoop up cheap supplies after heavy rains damaged the domestic crop.
Following a splurge on Australian wheat earlier in the year, large quantities have been booked this month from some of the other main exporters, including the US, Canada, and France, according to traders, who declined to be identified discussing private business.
The buying spree comes after international wheat prices dropped to a three-year low at the end of September. Although that signals supplies are ample for now, China鈥檚 growing appetite adds an element of uncertainty to supply chains that have become increasingly vulnerable to war and protectionist trade policies.
鈥淐hina鈥檚 wheat imports will be strong going forward, and for sure they will exceed the annual quota,鈥 said Darin Friedrichs, co-founder of Sitonia Consulting Co. 鈥淚t seems like China鈥檚 bought up all of the easily exported supplies from Australia and is now needing to go further afield.鈥
Beijing uses quotas to manage imports of staples like wheat. It allows 9.636 million tons a year of the grain at a 1% tariff, with 90% of the allocation going to government firms. Above that cap, the tariff rises to 65%, a level usually out of reach for private buyers but not for the state-owned giants.
For years, the quota was never used up. But that changed in 2020 as Beijing鈥檚 trade deal with the Trump administration boosted purchases from the US. Last year, total imports hit a record 9.96 million tons as buyers swapped in wheat for other ingredients in animal feed, and Chinese citizens eat more bread. China now vies with Egypt as the world鈥檚 top importer.
Overseas purchases in the first eight months of 2023 have hit 9.56 million tons, with more than 60% sourced from Australia. Buyers are surveying the southern hemisphere nation鈥檚 upcoming harvest for future supplies, as well as watching crop conditions in alternative origins like Kazakhstan, the traders said.
Ever mindful of ensuring food security for its one-billion-plus population, Beijing is keen to build up its grain stockpiles, particularly against the backdrop of the war in Ukraine 鈥 another big exporter 鈥 and increasingly frequent bouts of extreme weather as the planet warms.
China鈥檚 recent buying activity is largely tied to the weather problems it experienced as this year鈥檚 crop approached harvest, said Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist at StoneX Financial, Inc. He estimated that persistent rains reduced the quality of 30 million to 40 million tons of wheat, leaving it suitable for livestock feed but not human consumption.
鈥淭hat increased the need for China to buy higher-quality milling wheat from the world market, to blend with its own wheat to meet its goals for food quality,鈥 Mr. Suderman said.
China鈥檚 summer wheat crop, which makes up the bulk of the harvest, fell 0.9% to 134.53 million tons this year, according to official data. That鈥檚 the first decline in seven years. 鈥 Bloomberg


