China Continues to Purchase U.S. Agricultural Products

Following talks in Hawaii this week China intends to increase purchasing of U.S agricultural products as it tries to meet its obligations to the phase one trade deal.   The world’s largest soybean importer is playing catch up after falling behind due to the COVID-19 pandemic. An unnamed source told Bloomberg news that the Chinese …

Oil Through the Looking Glass 19/6/20

*China’s New 0.5% Contract* The new contract will launch Monday on the Shanghai International Energy Exchange (INE). This development follows the news that 20 Chinese refineries are ready to provide the new IMO compliant fuel. China removed a consumption tax on fuel oil this year and issued its first-ever supply quotas for 10 million tonnes …

FIS Weekly Market comments – 19 Jun 2020

PBF and Mac fines, most popular among buyers Australian medium grade fines remained the firm favorite for Chinese buyers for the week ended 19 Jun 2020. Among the total purchases of over 1.9 million mt, the Pilbara Blend fines (PBF) and Mac fines remained at the top spots accounting 17% respectively, followed by FMG SSF …

Capesize breaks the $20,000 level

Capesize rates reached another new height again and broke the $20,000 level amid the freight rally. Thus, the Capesize 5 time charter average increased by $6,244 day-on-day to $25,280 on Thursday, another year-high rates, even after a selloff by trade participants for profit-taking. Supported by robust Capesize market, the Baltic Dry Index (BDI) achieved the …

ShipShape: The Long and Winding Road

It is one of the best-known Beatles songs from their final studio album Let It Be, but it also encapsulates perfectly the challenge many commodity markets face as they begin to recover from the enormous disruption of Coronavirus.   The pandemic has impacted every metric you can think of: quantitative easing, government debt, unemployment, share …

DCE flats on low port inventory

Chinese futures changed little as the market tried to end the week on positive note with huge drawdown of port inventory. Thus, the most-actively traded iron ore futures on the Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE), for September delivery, rose slightly by 0.13% day-on-day to RMB 768 per tonne on Friday. Likewise, the steel rebar contract on …

DCE drops for the second day on easing Brazilian supply

Chinese futures slid for the second consecutive day due to supply easing as Vale reopened its Itabira complex. As such, the most-actively traded iron ore futures on the Dalian Commodity Exchange (DCE), for September delivery, dropped by 1.03% day-on-day to RMB 765 per tonne on Thursday. However, the steel rebar contract on the Shanghai Futures …