By Audrey Jackson
Mississippi Today’s Cassandra Stephenson reported that, “crops are in the ground, the weather is cooperating, soybean prices are up slightly from 2025, and China — the biggest buyer of U.S. soybean exports — is once again placing orders after a trade agreement ended the country’s purchasing freeze last fall.”
“But while morale is higher among soybean farmers as the 2026 growing season gets underway, the cost to plant crops remains high, and U.S. Department of Agriculture data shows there is still a long way to go before China’s purchases reach pre-trade war levels,” Stephenson reported.
“‘There have been some positive movements in trade relations with China, specifically with soybeans, that have caused markets to improve over last year,’ said Stefan Maupin, executive director of the Tennessee Soybean Promotion Council,” Stephenson reported. “‘However, we are definitely not where we were in years past. For most farmers out there, the big question in front of them is, will it get back?’”
“Soybeans are a major agricultural product nationwide, covering about 10% of all U.S. farmland,” Stephenson reported. “Roughly 40% of U.S. soybeans are exported, and in recent years, around half of exported beans went to China.”
Source : illinois.edu