Five months ago, one of China's leading pork analysts vociferously denied making a dire prediction that Chinese hog prices would crash during 2026. Prices are now tumbling to levels unseen in decades, and the bearish prediction he had disavowed now appears to have been more or less accurate. Why did he disown a bearish forecast? What does this incident say about the China dream of AI-driven agriculture? On November 24, 2025, long-time Chinese hog analyst Feng Yonghui posted an article on his soozhu.com web site denying that he had predicted that hog prices would fall below RMB 10-to-11 per kg and stay there during 2026. Mr. Feng disavowed the bearish forecast, calling it a "malicious spreading of rumors." He blamed an artificial intelligence algorithm for splicing together comments he had made out of context and constructing a misleading assessment that tarnished his reputation. Five months later, on March 23, Mr. Feng's site reported that hog prices h...
Chinese officials suddenly became very accommodating regarding weed seeds in Brazilian soybean cargoes within days after President Trump announced that he will postpone his summit with Xi Jinping. Ten days ago this blog reported that vessels loaded with soybeans were stranded in Brazilian ports as they waited for strict inspections to be completed by Brazil's Ministry of Agriculture. New, stricter inspections were prompted by Chinese customs complaints about weed seeds, soybeans coated with insecticides or fungicides, and heat damage. On March 6, Cargill, CHS and COFCO requested clarification from the Brazilian Ministry , and Cargill reportedly suspended purchases of Brazilian soybeans for export to China. According to a March 16 report , offers for Brazilian soybeans for shipment to China had dried up. A delegation led by the director of the Department of Animal and Plant Health in Brazil's Agriculture Ministry rushed to China for negotiations with Chinese officials on M...