China beans market: stable FOB prices, rising imports from South/Southeast Asia and Africa, strong exports to India, Russia, Yemen, Greece. Short‑term outlook mixed.
Prices
Recent FOB indications in Beijing (EUR/tonne equivalent) show a broadly stable to slightly easing trend across key Chinese bean origins:
The narrow week-on-week declines (mostly EUR 0.01–0.02/t) signal a calm market, with no evidence yet of aggressive selling pressure or supply shock. International benchmarks in Brazil and the UK show similarly mild easing, suggesting that the global beans complex is in a consolidation phase rather than a sharp downtrend.
Supply & Demand
January–February 2026 trade data point to a clear shift in China’s import structure. Beans imports are increasingly sourced from India, Thailand, Ethiopia and other South Asian, Southeast Asian and African origins, with India and Thailand showing particularly strong volume growth. This diversification cushions China against single-origin risks and improves short-term availability.
On the export side, shipments from China have remained at high levels, with major destinations including India, Russia, Yemen and Greece. Strong offtake into these markets underpins demand for Chinese beans and has so far prevented any significant domestic surplus from building despite higher imports. Looking ahead to May, this export pattern is likely to continue, but buyers should monitor demand in Europe and the Middle East closely, as any seasonal increase in European consumption or disruptions in international logistics could quickly alter flows.
Fundamentals & Weather Outlook
Fundamentals for April–May hinge on weather outcomes in the key supplying regions to China. If South and Southeast Asian production areas record good harvests, China can expect ample import availability in the coming months, reinforcing the current, slightly softer price tone. However, climate-related issues such as excessive rainfall or heat in these regions could curb exportable surpluses and firm Chinese CIF and FOB prices.
Within China, near-term weather in major bean-producing provinces (Northeast and North China Plain) will be important for the next crop cycle, but current prices mainly reflect trade rather than domestic crop risk. Any later-season adverse weather would likely impact the medium-term outlook more than the immediate 3–4 week horizon.
Trading Outlook
- Importers in China: With imports from India and Thailand rising and prices edging slightly lower, consider gradually extending coverage for Q2–early Q3 while monitoring South Asian weather. Avoid overbuying until harvest outcomes are clearer.
- Exporters in China: Maintain offer discipline; strong demand from India, Russia, Yemen and Greece supports current FOB levels. Use any short-term dips driven by improved import availability as an opportunity to secure forward sales.
- Overseas buyers: For European and Middle Eastern buyers, the risk lies more in logistics and freight than in origin prices at this stage. Building modest safety stocks could be prudent if there are early signs of shipping disruptions.
3-Day Price Direction (FOB, indicative)
- CN Beijing – Mung beans, Kidney beans, Adzuki: Sideways to slightly soft over the next 3 days, reflecting comfortable import supply and steady export demand.
- BR Brasília – Kidney & Alubia beans: Mild downward bias amid stable global demand but no immediate weather threats.
- GB London – Fava, broad and dried beans: Largely sideways; local market is well-supplied with no strong bullish catalyst in the very short term.