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Corn extends rally as China may boost imports as reserves drop

Sunday, 13 June 2010


CHICAGO, June 12 (Bloomberg): Corn rose, capping the biggest weekly gain since April, on speculation that shrinking inventories will force Chinese processors to boost imports from the US, the world's largest exporter.
China, the second-largest corn user, sold 524,800 metric tonnes from government reserves Friday to meet domestic demand, the National Grain & Oil Information Centre said. China may import a "huge" amount of US corn, Sam Niu Yishan, the assistant director for US Grains Council in Beijing, said in a report Thursday. China's harvest declined 6.6 per cent last year.
"Potential new Chinese corn imports will remain a supportive feature" for prices, said Greg Grow, the director of agribusiness for Archer Financial Services Inc in Chicago. "There are people looking for more sales to be announced."
Corn futures for December delivery rose 6.5 cents, or 1.8 per cent, to $3.71 a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade, capping the first four-day gain since mid-April. The grain rose 3.2 per cent for the week, the largest such gain for the contract since April 30.
China may have planted as much as 3 per cent fewer acres this year, after rain, snow and cold weather last month encouraged farmers to switch to green beans, sunflowers and other crops, Yishan said after members of the industry-funded US Grains Council traveled more than 1,864 miles (3,000 kilometers) earlier this month to examine planting conditions.
Corn inventories in China may be 15 per cent smaller than last year, and the quality of last year's crop has declined because of mold problems in storage facilities, Yishan said in the report.
"The consensus is that Chinese supplies are tight and that they will require more imports," Thomas Dorr, the president and chief executive officer of the US Grains Council, said in a telephone interview. "Demand for high-quality protein including meat, milk and eggs is growing very substantially in China."
Corn is the biggest US crop, valued at $48.6 billion in 2009, government figures show. The US is the biggest user of the grain.