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China Tariffs Target US Farm Belt: Stocks and ETFs in Focus

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Finally, the dragon is ready to take on the eagle in the raging import tariff issue. Though the Asian country initially announced $3 billion worth of retaliatory tariffs on U.S. imports, it matched the tariff value (more than $50 billion) this week with the United States and declared that it will levy tariffs on more than 100 American products. The move came after the United States proposed $50 billion tariffs on 1,300 Chinese products (read: 8 Must-Watch ETFs if Trump Slams Tariffs on China by Friday).

Notably, Beijing’s retaliatory tariffs target U.S. agricultural and food exports considerably. The product list comprises yellow soybean, black soybean, corn, corn flour, other wheat and mixed wheat, different kinds of fresh and cold beef, dried cranberries, frozen orange juice, non-frozen orange juice and whiskies.

The move was expected only. After all, China purchases about half of the U.S. soybean and the country is the second-largest buyer of American cotton. Needless to say, funds like Teucrium Soybean Fund (SOYB - Free Report) , Teucrium Corn ETF (CORN - Free Report) , iPath Pure Beta Cotton ETN and iPath Bloomberg Livestock SubTR ETN COW will be in focus now. SOYB and CORN were down more than 1.8% and 1.9%, respectively, on Apr 4.

Will These Agriculture Stocks Hit a Wall?

DowDuPont Inc DWDP fears its agriculture unit could be hurt by the rising trade qualms as there could be “price declines in the total market” for soybeans, quoted on Reuters. Agricultural machinery maker Deere & Co (DE - Free Report) lost about 2.9% on Apr 4. Soybean exporter Archer Daniels Midland Co (ADM - Free Report) and another agribusiness Bunge Limited (BG - Free Report) gained on Apr 4 but could be in focus as long as trade talks take the center stage.

Will Meat Producers Benefit?

Along with analysts like Mizuho’s Jeremy Scott, we too believe that if prices of soybeans and corns fall, the feed cost of meat producers will decline. This could help meat producers to benefit on margins in a difficult operating environment.

Tyson Foods Inc. (TSN - Free Report) , which is the world's largest processor and marketer of chicken, beef, and pork, may gain from this logic. Shares of TSN were up 2.3% on Apr 4. Livestock ETFs COW (up 3.3% on Apr 4) and iPath Pure Beta Livestock ETN (up more than 2.6% on Apr 4) may benefit from a likely decline in feed costs.

How Will These Country ETFs Behave?

Several country ETFs are poised to cash in on China’s up to 25% tariff on U.S. agriculture. Australia is one of the likely beneficiaries as Beijing can now turn to it for wine as well as nut and fruit requirements. Beijing’s tariffs on American pork will lead European Union, Brazil and Canada to export more to China now. So, these country ETFs including iShares MSCI Brazil Capped ETF (EWZ - Free Report) , iShares MSCI Canada ETF (EWC - Free Report) and iShares MSCI Australia ETF (EWA - Free Report) are all under the spotlight.

What About Wine ETF?

China is on its way to becoming the world’s ‘second-most valuable wine market’ only after the United States. American wine exports (97% from California) to greater China in fact increased 10% in 2017. While the United States has slowly been making inroads into China’s booming wine market, the tariff can hurt California’s brewing industry.

The market share loss of the United States will help exporting nations like France, Spain and Italy, but is less likely to hurt the wine fund Spirited Funds/ETFMG Whiskey & Spirits ETF . This is because the fund has a global approach and the United States accounts for only 13.5% of the basket (read: Why These Sector ETFs Are Winning Picks Now).

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