Eastern Eye (UK)

GLOBAL RESERVES AND IMPROVING INDIA OUTLOOK WILL QUELL CONCERNS, SAY TRADERS

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ABUNDANT rice supplies in key exporters may offset an expected drop in output after floods in Pakistan and heatwave in China damaged crops, capping any gains in prices from steady Asian demand.

Pakistan, which is the world’s fourthlarg­est rice exporter, suffered extensive damage to agricultur­e, including rice, as floods ravaged large swathes of its farmland, while extremely high temperatur­es in parts of China at the end of August have taken a toll on rice output in the world’s biggest importer of the staple.

However, global stockpiles of rice are pretty comfortabl­e and an improving outlook of the Indian crop should quell any supply concerns and limit any price increases from recent strong demand that has emerged from Bangladesh, said a Singapore-based trader at one of the world’s top rice trading companies.

Pakistan is forecast to have lost around 10 per cent of its 2022 estimated rice production of around 8.7 million tonnes, while China has suffered some damage, although the extent of crop losses is not clear, traders said. Food prices have soared in markets across Pakistan as devastatin­g rains ruin crops and disrupt supplies, an early sign of how the worst floods in decades are creating food shortages at a time of crisis.

“Pakistan’s rice output has been really good over recent seasons,” Peter Clubb, a market analyst at the Internatio­nal Grains Council said. “While any large production loss is obviously bad, that improvemen­t in production over recent seasons gives a bit of leeway.”

China’s agricultur­e minister Tang Renjian expressed concern that high temperatur­es and drought have hit rice production in the eastern provinces of Jiangsu and Anhui. “It is too early to say exactly how poor yields (in China) may be,” Clubb said.

“A general point, stocks in China are still very ample.”

Monsoon rains, which were delayed in parts of India’s northern and eastern rice producing regions, have improved over the last couple of weeks, boosting crop prospects in the world’s largest rice supplier, traders said.

India had earlier been examining a need to restrict exports of 100 per cent broken rice mainly used for feed purposes.

But an improvemen­t in rainfall over the Indian rice growing areas has ended any discussion of government restrictio­ns on exports, said a second trader in Singapore who sells Indian rice to buyers in Asia as well as Africa.

The United Nations Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on’s world price index fell for a fifth month in August, after hitting a record in March after Russia invaded Ukraine, as a resumption of grain exports from Ukrainian ports contribute­d to improved supply prospects.

However, strong demand for rice from

Bangladesh has underpinne­d rice prices in recent weeks.

Bangladesh plans to import around 1.2 million tonnes of rice over the next few months to shore up reserves and cool high domestic prices.

A senior Bangladesh­i food ministry official said the country is buying 530,000 tonnes of rice from India, Vietnam and Myanmar under government-to-government deals and is in talks with major producers India, Vietnam and Thailand.

Indian rice prices last week climbed to their highest in more than a year at around $383 (£332.2) per tonne, although the market is well below the 2021 high of $405 (£351) and 2020 peak of $427.50 (£371).

Thailand and Vietnam, the world’s secondand third-largest rice exporters, respective­ly, have agreed to cooperate on raising prices, a move aimed at increasing leverage in the global market and boosting farmers’ incomes.

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