China’s purchases of key commodities fell in October from the prior month, mainly because of seasonal factors including an extended holiday at the start of the month in the world’s biggest buyer of raw materials. While the nation’s broader imports couldn’t hold September’s heady pace, slumping to below-consensus growth of 4.7%, “a second straight monthly expansion suggests a continuous rebound in domestic demand,” according to Bloomberg Economics.
Soybeans Drop
Natural gas imports fell to a three-month low of 7.5 million tons, in a lull before peak winter demand.
Iron ore shipments topped 100 million tons for a fifth month, with the year-to-date total running 11% ahead of 2019 as China turned to its usual infrastructure splurge to rejuvenate the economy. A slowdown is expected in subsequent months as winter production curbs cut demand from the steel industry.
Soybean imports dropped to 8.7 million tons, a six-month low, as cargoes from Brazil, the country’s largest supplier, dwindled. But the total was far higher than last year due to the recovery in the domestic hog herd after African swine fever, and expanded U.S. purchases to fulfill China’s trade deal obligations.
And while meat and offal imports also fell in October, the near-70% rise through the year so far to over 8 million tons is a record as China is forced to import more protein to cover its pork shortfall.