Vegetable Oil price

• Purchases from China in the commodity markets. By 2021, the main engine of economic recovery, according to the IMF, is expected to be emerging countries, mainly China and India. The former has been entering the commodity markets with heavy purchases of oil, soybeans, sunflower oil, and various cereals, which has boosted prices after hitting lows as a result of the “sell-off of the pandemic”.

• Lower stocks of oilseeds expected in the world by the end of the 20/21 season. China’s greater purchases of oilseeds would allow in this new 20/21 season, to reduce stocks globally, improving the price outlook for both soybeans and sunflower. According to USDA data, final soybean stocks are expected to end at 93.5 Mt, falling 2.5% compared to the previous season. This level of stocks would be at levels similar to those registered in the 16/17 campaign.

• Increase in monetary issuance by the world’s main economies. In this, the issuance of the United States plays an important role since, to alleviate the effects of the quarantine and the loss of jobs in much of the country, it has decided to face a highly expansionary monetary and fiscal policy by increasing the budget deficit and financing the same with a monetary issue. Due to the increase in the monetary aggregates of that country, and the rest of the economies that follow the same measures, an increase in global inflation is generated in the medium term. Financial markets have anticipated these effects by increasing the price of publicly traded companies around the world. In the second instance, commodities could follow this trend. The main saver of dollars in the world, China, as a result of its trade surplus, has entered the commodity markets with heavy purchases since if inflation is expected to rise from now on, it is much more rational to save on goods than on constant sounding dollars or United States treasury bonds that trade at very low rates. An example of this case is soybean imports for the 19/20 marketing season, which are estimated at a record 98 million tons.

These last factors are the ones that are hitting the soy market the most. In this segment, the probability of the occurrence of La Niña for this summer, in the Southern Hemisphere, could cause adverse conditions for our crops in our country and in some regions of Brazil, which would decrease the global supply of soy.

Despite all these factors, in the last two weeks volatility began to be felt in the price of oilseeds and financial markets in general. Among other causes, it is due to the outbreaks of COVID-19 that occur in many parts of the world, which is currently called “the second wave” and the least hope of timely arrival of a vaccine against this virus. This makes recovery expectations more pessimistic since in this scenario the restrictions imposed on the movement of people and activities could be maintained for a longer time, damaging the level of world activity.

Source: www.bcr.com.ar

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