• to start buying more argentine soybeans oil world-reuters in Malawi
  • to start buying more argentine soybeans oil world-reuters in Malawi
  • to start buying more argentine soybeans oil world-reuters in Malawi
  • to start buying more argentine soybeans oil world-reuters in Malawi
  • To whom do soybean farmers in Malawi sell?
  • Approximately 63.5% of soybean farmers in Malawi sell their produce to vendors, 19.3% to wholesalers, 8.7% to retailers, 7.8% to ADMARC, 5.2% to the National Smallholder Farmers Association of Malawi (NASFAM), 4.3% to fellow farmers, and 3.5% sell to Mulli Brothers Group of companies.
  • Why are Argentine farmers selling soy?
  • REUTERS/Matias Baglietto/File Photo By Maximilian Heath BUENOS AIRES (Reuters) - Argentine farmers are selling their soy crop at the slowest pace in 10 years as producers in the South American country bet on a likely weakening of the peso currency and potential tax relief from the government of libertarian President Javier Milei.
  • Why did Argentine farmers delay soybean sales in 2024/25?
  • WEATHER AND CORN The delay in soybean sales is also linked to adverse weather that hit Argentine farmers at different spells of the 2024/25 campaign, earlier during planting last year and a tough drought in January-February that made producers more cautious.
  • Which country exports the most soybeans in 2024/25?
  • The latest government data show that farmers in Argentina, the world's largest exporter of soybean oil and meal, had sold 8.4 million tons of 2024/25 soybeans as of March 19, equivalent to between 17.3%-18.1% of the expected harvest.
  • Why does Milei have a slow sale of soybeans?
  • The slower soybean sales are a worry for Milei, whose government needs dollars to help stabilize the local peso. Soy is the country's main source of foreign currency, mainly through exports of processed soy oil and meal.
  • Why are soybean sales slowing in Buenos Aires?
  • "The uncertainty and the numbers don't add up. Producers are waiting to see a change," said Jaquelin, who is also president of the rural society of Pergamino in Buenos Aires province. The slower soybean sales are a worry for Milei, whose government needs dollars to help stabilize the local peso.