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Soybean price dip costs Argentina $ 937 million.

Saturday, July 24th 2004 - 21:00 UTC
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A drop in the world price of soybeans over the past three months will result in a loss of some $937 million in export revenue fro Argentina, Buenos Aires daily Ambito Financiero reported this Friday.

The estimate calculated by farm experts was calculated based on Argentine soybean exports of 16 million tons at a time when the price of the grain has fallen 25% since last April.

Despite the price drop, soybean is currently quoted in the range of 170 US dollars per ton, a 7.5% increase compared to a year ago, when prices began to climb on international markets. Experts attribute the price drop to both lower demand from China and favorable weather in the United States which is the world's largest soybean producer, followed by Brazil and Argentina.

Ricardo Baccarin from Argentine agriculture consulting company Panagricola is quoted saying that the trend toward lower soybean prices will strengthen if U.S. production increases, as forecasted.

"There's nothing to do but wait for reaction from Asia and Europe in order to study price trends," said Mr. Baccarin who noted that last Thursday soybean prices on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange dipped to their lowest level since last September.

According to one trader at the Argentine Grain Exchange, soybean "has entered a critical zone" in which price recovery "is not in sight." China buys 70% of Argentina's soybean, and imported 8.85 million tons of the grain last year, according to official figures.

Argentina is forecast to produce 34.7 million tons of soybean during the current harvest, compared with the 35.2 million tons in the 2002-2003 season.

Categories: Mercosur.

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