Mexico no longer top US corn-buyer after trade tensions

A cob of corn is seen in field during the harvest in Minooka, Illinois, September 24, 2014.  Corn prices, trying to consolidate after falling to a four-year low as a record-large U.S. harvest pick up speed and as continued reports of spectacular early U.S. yields and softening cash markets hang over the market. Contracts held above lifetime lows in overnight trade. Photo taken September 24, 2014.  REUTERS/Jim Young (UNITED STATES  - Tags: AGRICULTURE BUSINESS COMMODITIES)   - RTR47PBB

Bloomberg

Mexico is no longer the biggest buyer of corn from the US, a sign that trade tensions are pushing American grain toward other markets while its southern neighbor lines up new suppliers.
Sales to Mexico through May were $1.04 billion, down 6.7 percent from a year earlier, the US Department of Agriculture said in a monthly update. That contrasts with the 32 percent increase for the overall value of US corn exports in the period, during which the average dollar value of the commodity was little changed. Japan boosted its purchases 53 percent to $1.19 billion to become the largest importer of American corn.
Mexico initiated talks with other major corn exporters this year after it was criticized by President Donald Trump, who said the country has taken advantage of its northern neighbor through the North American Free Trade Agreement, taking away jobs and investment. The dispute helped to send the Mexican peso to a record low against the dollar in January
Mexican purchases now seem to be rebounding as the peso recovers, said Lesly McNitt, public policy director for the National Corn Growers Association in Washington. Still, the relatively sluggish pace of shipments shows how the bilateral trade relationship in agriculture is at risk, with Nafta heading toward a renegotiation as soon as next month, she said.
“They are preparing a Plan B in case the US becomes a less reliable supplier,” she said. “We would hope they wouldn’t have to feel the need for a Plan B. For a long time, they didn’t.”

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