Analysis-China's farmers dump other crops for corn on bumper profit pull

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By Hallie Gu and Gavin Maguire

BEIJING/SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Chinese farmers have sharply increased corn planting this year to cash in on demand-fuelled record prices, a trend that is likely to cool the country's recent rampant appetite for imports heading into 2022.

The expansion, which comes mainly at the expense of soybeans and other crops including sorghum and edible beans, would boost China's maize output in 2021/22 by at least 6%, according to market participants.

That will likely ease a repeat of last year when strong feed demand from the hog sector propelled China's corn use beyond local production and sparked a 26-million tonne import spree that turned the world's largest grain producer into the top corn buyer.

"I'm going to grow corn on all my land this year. No more other stuff," said Li, a farmer in the northern Hebei province who last year grew millet on about one third of the 300 mu (20 hectares) of land he manages.

"Corn prices jumped so high last year. Profits would be good," said Li, who declined to give his full name.

(Graphic: China corn prices rallied by more than a third in 2020 and scaled record highs in May this year, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ce/ygdpzzkylpw/ChinaCornPricesvsImports.png)

Consistent and accurate data on China's crop footprints is hard to come by, especially following the unexplained suspension of Beijing-based agriculture information provider Cofeed. The private consultancy, which many in the market regarded as the most comprehensive supplier of information on grains and oilseeds in China, ceased updating data in April.

With Cofeed offline, and other consultancies reluctant to diverge their crop views too far from government estimates that are often considered conservative, market participants have become increasingly reliant on anecdotal evidence for nearer-term readings on acreage shifts.

JCI has forecast a 6.2% rise, around 14.9 million tonnes, in corn output in 2021/22 to 253.9 million tonnes, the highest in four years. Based on surveys among farmers and other industry players like seed sellers, JCI estimates corn acreage expanding by 3.9% to 42.0 million hectares.

(Graphic: China corn production and area since 2000, https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/gfx/ce/jbyvrzmjove/ChinaCornOutputvsArea.png)

"Corn prices are high and benefits are good. People still think there will be a corn shortage (this year) while livestock farming is recovering," said JCI analyst Rosa Wang.

"Farmers have very high enthusiasm in growing corn. The government also encourages more planting of corn."