Swine Fever Resurgence Damps Hopes for U.S. Soybean Farmers

03/16/2021

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Kirk Maltais | The WSJ

A resurgence of a lethal pig disease is putting new strain on China’s efforts to rebuild its herds—a threat to U.S. farmers’ hopes to sell more soybeans there this year.

A new outbreak of African swine fever in the world’s leading hog-producing nation is killing increasing numbers of Chinese pigs, with the sow herd falling 3% to 5% each month since December, according to a report Tuesday from Rabobank. Chinese officials had forecast that the country would return to pre-disease hog herds this year. The new outbreaks could delay that until 2023, Rabobank found.

African swine fever, a disease harmless to humans but nearly always fatal to pigs, has taken a huge bite out of China’s hog supplies in recent years. In 2019, the spread of the disease cut China’s hog herd by roughly 40% to 260 million head, according to Rabobank.

“Concerns from our boots on the ground in China escalated considerably after the Lunar New Year holiday,” said Arlan Suderman, chief commodities economist with StoneX Group Inc.

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