# China Confirms US Farm Tariff Relief Coming

> Source: [https://icharles.com/articles/china-us-farm-tariff-relief](https://icharles.com/articles/china-us-farm-tariff-relief) (canonical)
> Author: iCharles News — iCharles, https://icharles.com
> Published: 2026-07-07

## TL;DR

China's commerce ministry confirmed on July 2, 2026 that US agricultural products will be included in planned reciprocal tariff reductions. The announcement followed Trump's May visit, during which China committed to buying $17 billion in US farm goods annually. Grain futures surged overnight on July 6: November soybeans hit a four-week high, up 34¼ cents, and December corn rose 13¼ cents to its own four-week high.

## What did China officially confirm about US farm tariffs?

On July 2, 2026, Chinese commerce ministry (MofCom) spokesperson He Yadong said China and the US had "agreed in principle to include relevant agricultural products in the reciprocal tariff reduction framework." That is the first official confirmation from Beijing that agriculture will be part of planned US-China tariff rollbacks, according to [Trivium China's reporting](https://triviumchina.com/2026/07/03/beijing-confirms-tariff-relief-is-coming-for-us-agriculture/).

The statement came after months of uncertainty. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent had previously suggested agriculture would not be included in reciprocal tariff reductions. US Trade Representative Jamieson Greer also launched a public comment process on what Washington should include, which added further confusion.

## How did grain markets respond?

Grain futures rallied sharply overnight on July 6. By 6:00 a.m. CDT, November soybeans were up 34¼ cents and hit a four-week high. December corn was up 13¼ cents and also hit a four-week high. September soybean meal rose $6.40 to a four-week high. December SRW wheat gained 10½ cents to a two-week high.

[Pro Farmer's Jim Wyckoff noted](https://www.profarmer.com/news/first-thing-today/first-thing-today-grain-markets-rally-amid-increased-weather-concerns) that the few trading days right after the Fourth of July holiday have historically been price-pivotal for corn and soybeans. The tariff news landed alongside weather concerns that added to bullish momentum.

## What weather factors are pushing grain prices higher?

A severe heatwave in France is threatening that country's corn crop. The FranceAgriMer agency reported deteriorating conditions after preliminary estimates showed extreme heat may have damaged nearly one-third of France's corn crop. France is one of the European Union's largest corn producers.

In the US, World Weather Inc. warned that soil moisture was drying down in the lower Midwest and the central and northeastern Plains. Rain this week "will be restricted in quite a few areas, resulting in additional drying, especially with temperatures staying warm," the forecaster said. Rainfall next week may be most limited in the southwestern corn and soybean belt.

## What was agreed during Trump's May visit to China?

The White House announced that during President Donald Trump's May visit, China committed to buying $17 billion in US farm goods annually. Trivium China noted that removing China's remaining tariffs on American agricultural products would make them more competitive with South American exports.

Here's what we know so far: the path from that commitment to actual trade flows still depends on the tariff mechanics being finalized, and the MofCom statement is the first concrete signal those mechanics are moving forward.

## What is the timeline for tariff rollback announcements?

The US Trade Representative's public comment period closes July 10. Rebuttal submissions are accepted through late July. According to Trivium China, that creates a window for the first detailed tariff rollback announcements to land in August or early September — ahead of Xi Jinping's planned US visit.

| Milestone | Date |
|---|---|
| Trump's May visit; China commits to $17B annual farm purchases | May 2026 |
| MofCom spokesperson He Yadong confirms ag tariff relief | July 2, 2026 |
| USTR public comment period closes | July 10, 2026 |
| Rebuttal submissions accepted through | Late July 2026 |
| First detailed rollback announcements expected | August–September 2026 |

## How does US beef fit into China's import picture?

US beef exports to China are also expected to pick up in the second half of 2026. China renewed import licenses for US meat plants, though trade has not yet revived. Bloomberg reported that Australia has run out of its quota and Brazil is close to exhausting its allowance. The US still holds a large quota allowance, giving it a competitive edge over rival suppliers.

China's slowing economy and austerity measures have reduced demand for premium cuts. But with rival quotas dwindling, US beef has a structural opening in the second half of the year.

## What other market signals are moving this week?

OPEC+ members agreed on July 6 to add 188,000 barrels per day to their output target for August. That brings total quota additions to 940,000 barrels per day since the group began reversing its output curbs. WTI crude was trading around $68.50 a barrel on July 6.

US stock funds saw $17.2 billion in outflows in the week through July 1, the largest since March, according to Bank of America citing EPFR Global data. The Philadelphia Semiconductor Index dropped 11% over two sessions amid skepticism around AI valuations — a trend worth watching for anyone tracking AI funding and government AI deals.

Malaysian palm oil futures jumped over 1% to above MYR 4,500 per metric ton on Monday. Cargo surveyors estimated July 1–5 shipments rose between 10.6% and 11.1% from the same period in June.

The Fed FOMC meeting minutes from June are due for release this week. Investors will be watching for insight into officials' hawkish shift under new Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh. The 10-year US Treasury yield stood at 4.46% on July 6.

The USTR public comment period closing on July 10 is the next concrete checkpoint for US-China agricultural tariff details. Builders and founders tracking AI enterprise deals and automation trends should note that commodity market signals like this one often precede broader trade policy moves that reshape supply chains.

## Frequently asked questions

****What did China's commerce ministry say about US farm tariffs on July 2, 2026?****

MofCom spokesperson He Yadong said China and the US had "agreed in principle to include relevant agricultural products in the reciprocal tariff reduction framework." This was the first official confirmation from Beijing that US agricultural products would be part of planned reciprocal tariff reductions between the two countries.

****How much did soybean and corn futures move after the China tariff news?****

November soybean futures rose 34¼ cents to a four-week high by 6:00 a.m. CDT on July 6, 2026. December corn futures gained 13¼ cents, also hitting a four-week high. September soybean meal rose $6.40 to a four-week high, and December SRW wheat added 10½ cents to reach a two-week high.

****How much did China commit to buying in US farm goods during Trump's May visit?****

During President Trump's May 2026 visit, China committed to buying $17 billion in US farm goods annually. The White House announced this commitment. Trivium China noted that removing remaining tariffs on American agricultural products would make them more competitive with South American exports and could trigger a surge in purchasing.

****When will the first detailed US-China tariff rollback announcements be made?****

The USTR's public comment period closes July 10, 2026, with rebuttal submissions accepted through late July. According to Trivium China, that timeline creates a window for the first detailed tariff rollback announcements to land in August or early September 2026, ahead of Xi Jinping's planned US visit.

****What is happening to France's corn crop in July 2026?****

An intense heatwave in France prompted the FranceAgriMer agency to report deteriorating crop conditions. Preliminary estimates indicated extreme heat may have damaged nearly one-third of France's corn crop. France is one of the European Union's largest corn producers, and the damage contributed to the overnight grain futures rally on July 6, 2026.
