The Borneo Post

Trade spat with Mexico speeds US decline as global wheat supplier

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CHICAGO/MEXICO CITY: Mexican bread, pasta and flour-tortilla makers are seeking alternativ­e suppliers of wheat to reduce their dependence on the US as trade relations between the two neighbours deteriorat­e.

Mexico, the top importer of US wheat, is increasing­ly turning to cheaper supplies from Russia, which surpassed the US as the top global wheat supplier in 2016.

Now the US market share decline is accelerati­ng as Mexico casts about for more alternativ­e suppliers in Latin America and elsewhere to hedge against the risk that US grains will get more expensive if the Mexican government imposes tariffs, according to interviews with three large Mexican millers, internatio­nal grains traders, the top Mexican government agricultur­al trade official and government and industry data analysed by Reuters,

“It’s important to send signals to Mr Trump,” said Jose Luis Fuente, head of Canimolt, a Mexican trade group which represents 80 per cent of Mexican millers. Mexico will keep buying American wheat because of its proximity, he said, but “we can’t continue to have this absolute dependence.”

The shifting supply deals are alarming for the US industry, which has supplied the vast majority of Mexico’s wheat since the 1994 North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) took effect.

US wheat exports to Mexico dropped 38 per cent in value, to US$285 million, in the first five months of 2018. US wheat exports to all countries, valued at US$2.2 billion, dropped 21 per cent.

“The Mexico market ought to be just an extension of our domestic market,” said Justin Gilpin, CEO of the Wheat Commission in Kansas, the nation’s biggest wheatprodu­cing state.

Instead, Mexican buyers plan to import as much as 100,000 tonnes from Argentina – worth about US$20 million based on current prices – when it harvests wheat later this year, Fuente told Reuters. Mexico imported a test cargo of 33,000 tonnes in late 2017 after the its government financed a trade mission of grain buyers to find alternativ­es to US wheat in Latin America.

That same mission also resulted in Mexico raising its corn imports from Brazil, at the expense of sales from the US.

Mexico imported 10 times more corn from Brazil in 2017 than the previous year, and is on course to buy more this year.

Shortly after that trip, Mexico finalisedp­est-and-pathogenim­port clearances to allow shipments of wheat from Argentina, which until then had been forbidden.

The White House and the US Department of Agricultur­e did not respond to repeated requests for comment on how the nation’s trade policy might be accelerati­ng the decline of its wheat industry. The Office of the US Trade Representa­tive declined to comment.

The administra­tion of US President Donald Trump signaled its long-term commitment to tariffs this week when it announced that it would tap a Great Depression-era program for up to US$12 billion in aid to help US farmers hurt by the trade war that Trump started. Paying a premium

Global grain merchant Bunge, which runs one of the largest milling operations in Mexico, booked the Argentine wheat purchase together with seven

It’s important to send signals to Mr Trump. Jose Luis Fuente, head of Canimolt

other buyers – even though it cost US$1 or US$2 more per tonne than US wheat, Fuente said. Bunge declined to comment. The buyers included Grupo Trimex, Harinas Elizondo, Molino Harinero San Blas, Harinera Anahuac, Harinera Los Pirineos, Harinera El Paraiso and Harinera Tlalnepant­la. They all wanted to test the quality of the imports, Fuente said.

Grupo Trimex, Harinera Anahuac, Harinera Los Pirineos and Harinera El Paraiso did not respond to requests for comment. Molino Harinero San Blas and Harinera Tlalnepant­la declined to comment.

Manuel Iriso, CEO of Harinas Elizondo, which operates three flour mills in central Mexico, said the company was seeking the best quality wheat at the lowest cost, a goal it could achieve with a more diverse list of suppliers.

“We want the biggest number of options,” Iriso told Reuters. More trade missions

Senior Mexican government officials are planning a trade mission to Argentina this week, timed to coincide with the G20 Agricultur­e Ministeria­l Meeting, a source familiar with the planning told Reuters. It will mark the third such grains-focused visit in about a year.

Argentina’s effort to take a piece of the Mexico wheat market remains tentative and faces challenges in competing on price, said David Hughes, president of Argentine wheat industry chamber Argentrigo.

But with the country’s wheat now approved for import and the next crop nearly planted, “We are all set to sell to Mexico,” he said.

Mexico will have its own logistic struggles in weaning itself off US supplies, said Raul Urteaga, the head of internatio­nal trade for Mexico’s agricultur­e ministry, who confirmed the nation’s effort to expand supplies from Argentina.

“In the near term, it won’t be quick or easy to substitute the existing logistics or (US) import volumes, which are gigantic,” he said.

“All of our infrastruc­ture, both shipping and via trains, has been operating this way over for some 40, 50 years.”

But the need for alternativ­e supplies is becoming more pressing as US farmers are nearly finished gathering their winter-wheat crop, and the spring harvest approaches with no sign that the two countries will come to terms in a volatile renegotiat­ion of NAFTA.

Mexican officials threatened to impose tariffs on US grains last month if the trade conflict escalates. Mexico has already hit US imports of steel, apples and pork in retaliatio­n after Trump imposed tariffs on Mexican metal exports.

If Mexico taxes US wheat imports, Russian and other alternativ­e wheat supplies would be even more attractive for Mexican buyers.

During the first three months of this year, Russian and Ukrainian wheat exports to Mexico totaled 243,000 tonnes – or nine times more than the same period in 2017, according to Canimolt data, making the Black Sea region’s wheat farmers the biggest new source of imports for Mexican millers. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Now the US market share decline is accelerati­ng as Mexico casts about for more alternativ­e suppliers in Latin America and elsewhere to hedge against the risk that US grains will get more expensive if the Mexican government imposes tariffs. — Reuters...
Now the US market share decline is accelerati­ng as Mexico casts about for more alternativ­e suppliers in Latin America and elsewhere to hedge against the risk that US grains will get more expensive if the Mexican government imposes tariffs. — Reuters...

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