Corn Market Direction Murky As U.S.-Mexico Trade Reset Still Unsettled

 | Sep 04, 2018 04:10

The United States exported about $35 million worth of corn to Mexico in 1993, the year before the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) went into force. Twenty-three years later, long after Mexican tariffs fell to zero, the US sold $2.6 billion worth of corn to its largest foreign market, the HighPlains/Midwest AG Journal noted in an editorial on Monday.

Those statistics are worth remembering for the one important question they raise: will US corn continue to blaze the trail in Mexico under the bilateral trade agreement announced last week—which, for all intents and purposes, shapes the new NAFTA sans Canada? (Unless, of course, Ottawa makes a hasty bid to join). The answer might provide some comfort to those struggling for consensus on both the fundamental and technical outlooks of corn.

Few are in doubt that the US will return to be Mexico’s preeminent corn supplier once the Trump Administration reaches some sort of agreement on trade policies with the rest of the world. Mexico had in fact been pondering tariffs against US corn and soybeans and buying more of the two grains from Brazil and Argentina before the bilateral trade pact announced by Trump last week.

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Some argue that a reset in US-Mexico trade relations will not immediately boost corn’s near-term fundamentals. “The grain market, in general, remains bearish as we enter the harvest season in the next couple of weeks (and) that should continue to put pressure on corn,” Mike Seery of Seery Futures in Plainfield, Illinois, said in a commentary late last week.