China rapeseed meal futures slide after Trudeau announces plans to resign

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Published: January 7, 2025

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Beijing | Reuters — China’s rapeseed meal futures fell to a three-week low on Tuesday after Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s plans to resign sparked hope that trade tensions between Beijing and Ottawa will soften.

Trudeau said on Monday that he would step down in the coming months after nine years in power, triggering speculation that China – the world’s biggest importer of rapeseed which is also called canola – may suspend an anti-dumping investigation into imports from Canada.

The most active rapeseed meal futures for May delivery on the Zhengzhou Commodity Exchange fell 3.14 per cent on Tuesday to 2,284 yuan (C$447) per metric ton, the weakest close since Dec. 19 and the sharpest daily decline in a month.

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“China-Canada relations have been the biggest factor in the fluctuation of domestic rapeseed meal prices since September,” said Liu Jinlu, an agriculture researcher at Guoyuan Futures.

Any bearish news will accelerate price declines as China’s domestic rapeseed meal remains in oversupply and there is a lack of factors that would lift prices, Liu added.

China launched the anti-dumping investigation in September after Ottawa imposed 100 per cent tariffs on Chinese-made electric vehicles and other products.

Around 40 per cent of Canada’s rapeseed exports typically go to China, accounting for 90 per cent of China’s imports of the oilseed. The rapeseed trade between the two countries is worth about $2 billion (C$2.9 billion) a year.

Chinese importers have scaled back purchases of Canadian rapeseed and shipments from December are expected to have plunged. Most buyers are reluctant to sign new deals, worried that Beijing could impose retaliatory anti-dumping duties.

About the author

Geralyn Wichers

Geralyn Wichers

Reporter

Geralyn Wichers grew up on a hobby farm near Anola, Manitoba, where her family raised cattle, pigs and chickens. Geralyn graduated from Red River College’s Creative Communications program in 2019 and was previously a reporter for The Carillon in Steinbach. Geralyn is also a published author of science fiction and fantasy novels.

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