US soyoil jumps as China cuts export incentive for competing biofuel feedstock

Published 2024년 11월 17일

Tridge summary

U.S. soyoil futures increased by 2% following China's announcement to cut export incentives for products like used cooking oil, which is crucial for U.S. biofuels. China's finance ministry plans to reduce or eliminate export-tax rebates on certain refined oil products, including used cooking oil, starting next month. This move occurs amid tightening global vegetable oil supplies and rising prices. Despite potential effects on U.S. imports, analysts expect used cooking oil to remain a cost-effective feedstock for U.S. biofuels. U.S. imports of used cooking oil have nearly doubled in the first nine months of 2024, with over half coming from China.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

U.S. soyoil futures rallied 2% on Friday after China said it would cut export incentives for some products including used cooking oil, a low-cost feedstock that many U.S. biofuels makers use instead of domestically produced soyoil. China’s finance ministry said it would reduce or cancel the export-tax rebates starting next month, including some refined oil products that traders said would include used cooking oil, or UCO. The announcement was the latest wildcard for U.S. renewable fuels producers and feedstock suppliers following a presidential election win by Donald Trump, whose trade policies and domestic agenda could upend global trade flows. China’s move also comes as global supplies of vegetable oils are tightening and prices climbing, analysts said. December soyoil BOZ24 on the Chicago Board of Trade closed up 2% at 45.35 cents per pound after four days of losses that had dragged the market down from the seven-month peaks reached after the election. Still, market analysts ...

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