China Clamps Down on Inflation with New Commodity Rules

As analysts keep a close eye on rumored soybeans buys from China late last week, China has issued new rules when it comes to monitoring commodity prices as the country battles to contain inflation.

As analysts keep a close eye on rumored soybeans buys from China late last week, China has issued new rules when it comes to monitoring commodity prices as the country battles to contain inflation.

Officials in China say the country will issue new rules on the management of price indexes for commodities and services after inflation in the country recently hit its highest mark in more than 12 years. And it’s largely due to increasing commodity costs.

Right now, China’s commodity markets are serviced by mostly private index providers. They sell price data on major raw materials such as grain, metals and oil products.

The new measures are set to go into effect August 1, 2021.

AgWeb-Logo crop
Related Stories
Jamie Gieseke with Paradigm Futures says commodities are starting to gain favor with the funds on inflation fears and that includes grains. A China deal could just add fuel to the fire.
Both classes of winter wheat ended limit up on the day as USDA shocked the market with their aggressive production cuts in the May WASDE putting the crop at a 54 year low, according to Arlan Suderman, StoneX.
Vince Boddicker with Farmers Trading Company, says grain markets rallied on Monday adding risk premium on the war headlines but also positioning ahead of the May WASDE and China summit.
Read Next
Fresh analysis from FAPRI finds passage of year-round E15 would bring limited near-term gains to corn prices, while SRE changes would put pressure on farm income and negatively impact soybeans.
Get News Daily
Get Market Alerts
Get News & Markets App