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China's soy oil exports to India rise on domestic demand

By yash chouhan 2025-11-25 12:30:29
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China’s soyoil exports to India surge on growing domestic glut

China’s exports of soybean oil to India are surging as weak domestic demand for the cooking ingredient coincides with robust imports of soybeans from South America and, more recently, the US. 

Asia’s largest economy shipped a record 70,877 tonnes of the cooking oil in October, according to customs data, most of which went to India. Exports in the first 10 months of the year have reached 329,000 tonnes, almost triple what they were for the whole of 2024. 

Beijing has long viewed its dependence on foreign soybeans, which are processed into animal feed and cooking oil, as a vulnerability in a world where geopolitics and viruses can quickly disrupt commodity flows. However, robust imports from South America are hitting a fairly tepid local economy, forcing Chinese soyoil processors to seek new markets.

It’s another example of flagging consumption in China resulting in a surplus, with the excess flooding into global markets. In this case it’s a development that’s welcome in India, the world’s biggest importer of soybean oil. This newly forged trade route is likely to become busier, as China returns to buying US soybeans after last month’s trade truce, and relations between Beijing and New Delhi improve. 

The trade makes logistical sense for India, said Aashish Acharya, a vice president at Patanjali Foods Ltd, one of the country’s top vegetable-oil buyers. “Quality is comparable with South American supplies, prices are competitive and Chinese exporters are seeking reliable buyers.” 

Chinese soybean oil is trading at a discount of US$10 (RM41.36) to US$15 a tonne to that from South America, and can reach India’s east coast in about 10 to 12 days, compared with the 50- to 60-day journey from Brazil and Argentina, Acharya said. Imports from China are at about 70,000 tonnes so far in November and could increase by another 12,000 tonnes by month end, he said.

China is the world’s biggest producer of soybean oil, churning out around 20 million tonnes a year. It used to consume nearly all of that output at home, often having to resort to imports to meet local demand. But as the economy has cooled, people have cut back on eating out, damping soyoil consumption from restaurants.

The trade is being abetted by a glut of soybean oil that’s built up in China. Commercial stockpiles were at more than one million tonnes in mid-November, a seven-year high for that time of year, commodities consultancy Mysteel said in a note. Chinese crushers are expected to maintain a high level of activity and it will take time for local demand to recover, it said.
On the wire

China continued its buying of American soybeans, though traders remain cautious over whether the Asian nation will come through with the much larger level of expected purchases this year.

Seaborne shipments of liquefied natural gas to China in November are set to drop for a 13th straight month on an annual basis, extending a slump in purchases as domestic output and piped imports remain strong.

In the roughly three weeks since Japanese Prime Minister Sanae Takaichi commented on a possible Taiwan contingency in parliament, China has unleashed economic reprisals, nationalist barbs and a diplomatic offensive to show its displeasure.


read more :- CCI to ramp up cotton procurement at MSP, prices may rise above last year's



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