FCStone reduced its view by four million tonnes from its January estimate, saying that after the dry spell early in December, rains in January were below average in some key soya fields in central Brazil, likely hurting yields. Last year, Brazil produced a record crop of almost 120 million tonnes, and exported around 80 million tonnes of that mostly to China amid the trade spat between the Asian nation and the United States.
FCStone also slashed its soya export view for Brazil to only 68 million tonnes, considering that local crushing demand is likely to rise due to a higher biodiesel mix implemented by the government. From this year, diesel in Brazil will have 11 percent of biodiesel, compared to 10 percent in 2018.