By: Pratik
Parija and Prabhudatta Mishra
India, the largest rice grower after
China, is poised to rival Vietnam as the world’s biggest shipper, ending Thailand’s
30-year reign, after favorable weather and higher government prices boosted the
harvest to a record.
Exports may climb to 7 million metric tons in the year ending
Aug. 31, said Samarendu Mohanty, a senior economist at the International Rice
Research Institute. That’s more than double the 2.8 million tons shipped in
2010-2011, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Vietnam will export
7 million tons and Thailand 6.5 million tons, USDA data show.
Rice, the staple for half the world, has slumped
17 percent since reaching the highest price since 2008 in September after India
ended a three-year ban on exports of non-basmati varieties. Prices will
probably stay under pressure in coming months as global production outpaces
demand for an eighth year. That may extend a decline in global food costs,
which fell for the first time this year in April, United Nations data show.
Thailand was the top shipper last year with 10.6 million tons.
“There is a possibility of India emerging as the
largest exporter,” Mohanty said in a phone interview from Manila. A good
harvest will allow the country to continue exports next year, said Vijay Setia,
president of the All India Rice Exporters’ Association. The next crop may be
even higher as yields are increasing, he said.
Rough-rice futures for July were little changed
at $15.30 per 100 pounds on the Chicago Board of Trade today. Futures reached
$18.54 in September.
Record Output
The harvest in India may climb 7.7 percent to
103.4 million tons from 96 million tons a year earlier, according to the farm
ministry. State reserves of rice and wheat jumped 21 percent to 53.4 million
tons as of April 1, said the Food Corp. of India. The minimum purchase price of
the common variety of raw rice was increased to an all-time high of 1,080
rupees ($20) per 100 kilograms (220 pounds) in June from 1,000 rupees.
Exports of non-basmati varieties exceeded 4
million tons since the ban was scrapped, according to government data. Indian
shipments this year will represent 21 percent of global trade estimated at 33.9
million tons by the USDA.
Global paddy production in 2012 is expected to
increase 1.7 percent to 732.3 million tons, equivalent to 488.2 million tons of
milled rice, exceeding consumption at 477 million tons and boosting
inventories, the Rome-based Food & Agriculture Organization said May 4 in
its first forecast for 2012-2013.
While the USDA predicts Vietnam will ship 7
million tons this year, the country’s Ministry of Agriculture and Rural
Development on May 2 forecast exports of 5.42 million tons, 11 percent below
its previous estimate.
Competitive Prices
Thai Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra’s
attempts to boost farmer incomes through state purchases since taking power in
August has slowed exports and created opportunities for India, said Mohanty.
Indian rice is about $100 cheaper than supplies from Thailand, which is paying
above market rates to farmers, he said. The Southeast Asian nation has bought 8
million tons from growers so far, he said.
The free-on-board price of 25 percent broken
long-grain white rice in Thailand costs as much as $520 a ton compared with
$385 a ton in India, said Setia from the exporters’ association. “We are very
competitive compared with Thailand because of a large surplus and a weaker
rupee.”
The Indian rupee has weakened about 5 percent
against the dollar this quarter, making it the worst performing Asian currency.
The Thai baht has dropped 0.7 percent.
To contact the reporter on this story: Pratik
Parija in New Delhi at pparija@bloomberg.net; Prabhudatta Mishra at
pmishra8@bloomberg.net
To contact the editors responsible for this
story: James Poole at jpoole4@bloomberg.net; Sam Nagarajan at
samnagarajan@bloomberg.net
Courtesy Businessweek
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