China apos;s Corn Output To Fall After Typhoons Flatten Crops Damage...

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By Hallie Gu and Gavin Maguire

BEIJING/SINGAPORE, Sept 16 (Reuters) - China's corn crop is expected to fall by up to 10 million tonnes, or nearly 4%, tour du lịch quế lâm from the latest government estimates after heavy wind and rains toppled crops in major production areas in the northeastern cornbelt, analysts said.

Expected production losses have pushed Chinese corn futures to a record high and stoked worries over supply shortages in the world's second-largest consumer of the grain after it ran down once-mammoth state stockpiles and boosted imports.

"We think that corn output in the northeastern region would fall 5-10 million tonnes this (crop) year," said Zhang Dalong, analyst with COFCO futures, referring to the latest output estimate from the Ministry of Agriculture for the 2019/20 crop year of 260.7 million tonnes.

"Impact on output and quality of the grain will be felt over the longer term," Zhang said.

Three typhoons buffeted China's main corn belt of the provinces of Heilongjiang, Jilin, Liaoning and the Inner Mongolia region in late August and kynghidongduong.vn early September, flattening plants and flooding fields just as the corn crop reached maturity.

"Flattened crops are not equal to no harvest, and you might recover some output if the crops get handled properly later," said Meng Jinhui, senior analyst with Shengda Futures.

"But the cost of harvest will rise and there is increasing risk that the corn crops would lose their test weight while getting mouldy," said Meng, who gave an initial estimate that corn output in the northeastern region will drop by about 5 million tonnes.

The crop losses come just as demand strengthens from a fast recovering meat production industry, fanning concerns about potential feed-sector shortages.

The most active corn futures traded on the Dalian Commodity Exchange for delivery in January rose to a record 2,419 yuan ($357.16) per tonne on Monday.

Betting on higher prices, grain traders in northeastern China have expanded storage capacity while farmers plan to hold off sales this year, according to Cofeed, an agriculture consultancy.

Production losses in Heilongjiang, China's top corn producing province, could be up to 20%, Cofeed said in a report, citing findings from a crop Tour Quế Lâm earlier this month.

With domestic output falling, China is expected to import more from major suppliers like the United States.

"We would need to buy more (corn)," said an executive with a state-owned agriculture trading company.

Overseas corn "is cheap so it makes sense to buy. We don't have enough feed grains but can just buy," said the executive, who declined to be named as he was not authorized to speak to the media.

($1 = 6.7728 Chinese yuan renminbi)

(Reporting by Hallie Gu in Beijing, and Gavin Maguire in Singapore; Editing by Christian Schmollinger)