Soybean Trade Slows Down in Brazil Amid Price Mismatch
May, 16, 2025 Posted by Denise VileraWeek 202520
Soybean trading in Brazil has slowed significantly, hindered by a mismatch between buyers’ prices and sellers’ expectations.
According to researchers from Cepea (Center for Advanced Studies on Applied Economics), buyers are cautious in light of falling international prices and lower export premiums in Brazil, reducing export parity. This cautious environment is further influenced by a record domestic supply and increasing availability from Argentina.
On the other hand, sellers are optimistic, pointing to Brazil’s strong export performance in April and anticipating higher international demand in the coming months.
In April, Brazil exported 15.27 million tons of soybeans—up 4.2% from March and 4.2% higher than the same month in 2024, according to data from Secex. This figure represents the third-largest monthly soybean export volume in the country’s history, behind only June 2023 (15.58 million tons) and April 2021 (16.11 million tons). However, shipments to China—the top buyer—fell by 3% between March and April.
Source: CompreRural
-
Ports and Terminals
Aug, 31, 2021
0
São Francisco do Sul cargo handling up 19% in 2021
-
Other Logistics
Aug, 04, 2021
0
Investments in railways may increase demand for port terminals in the Northeast
-
Ports and Terminals
Jun, 25, 2021
0
Postal service initiates cabotage transport
-
Other Logistics
Aug, 05, 2025
0
ANTAQ sets criteria to curb abusive container demurrage charges