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The Lawspeaker
08-06-2010, 01:31 AM
Russia grain export ban sparks price fears (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/485c93ae-a06f-11df-a669-00144feabdc0.html?ftcamp=rss#)



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The prices of everyday staples such as bread, flour and beer are set to rise sharply after Russia imposed a ban on grain exports, triggering panic in commodities markets and sending wheat prices to their highest since the 2007-08 global food crisis. (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e8451a42-6ef3-11df-a2f7-00144feabdc0.html)

Vladimir Putin, Russian prime minister, announced the ban on all the country’s grain exports, effective within 10 days, after a severe drought devastated crops and wildfires spread across the country (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/c263e754-a0b7-11df-badd-00144feabdc0.html).

The move, which caught traders and food producers by surprise, pushed the price of wheat to its highest in two years (http://markets.ft.com/tearsheets/performance.asp?s=1037373&ss=WSODIssue) and evoked memories of the last time the then Soviet Union suffered a catastrophic crop failure in 1972. And Moscow introduced export restrictions during the 2007-08 global food crisis (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/e8451a42-6ef3-11df-a2f7-00144feabdc0.html), triggering a wave of panic buying from North Africa and Middle East importers

“There is full blown panic in the European grain market,” a senior trader said.

European wheat prices rose more than 12 per cent to hit a peak of €236 a tonne on record trading volumes. US wheat futures also jumped and are up more than 80 per cent since mid-June, the fastest rally in nearly 40 years. There were fears that food price inflation could take off and that the world could even suffer a repeat of the 2008 food crisis should the big shortfall in wheat output persist. “Soaring grain prices have brought food inflation back to centre stage,” said Joachim Fels of Morgan Stanley in London.

Prices of other crops including barley, corn and rapeseed, also jumped sharply.



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Shares in some of the world’s largest food companies tumbled on fears they would struggle to pass on all the increased costs of buying wheat to millions of households already suffering the effects of the financial crisis. However, several companies have already said they plan immediate price hikes on goods, such as bread and biscuits.

Unilever (http://markets.ft.com/tearsheets/performance.asp?s=uk:ULVR), the British consumer goods group, dropped 5.2 per cent, while General Mills (http://markets.ft.com/tearsheets/performance.asp?s=us:GIS), one of the world’s largest food companies, was 2.5 per cent lower. Nestlé (http://markets.ft.com/tearsheets/performance.asp?s=ch:NESN) fell 2.1 per cent.

“I think it would be expedient to introduce a temporary ban on export grains and other agricultural goods,” Mr Putin told a cabinet meeting. “We cannot allow an increase in domestic prices and we need to maintain the number of cattle.”

The ban would take effect from August 15 and last until December 31, a spokesman for Mr Putin said.

The worst drought in more than a century in the Black Sea region has led to widespread alarm. Forecasts for the Russian grain crop have been falling daily, with the agriculture ministry’s most recent projection at 70m-75m tonnes, down from 85m tonnes a fortnight ago. Last year, the harvest was 100m tonnes.

Traders at Glencore, the world’s largest commodity trading company, on Tuesday warned the crop could fall to about 65m tonnes (http://www.ft.com/cms/s/0/dfa6ba3a-9f27-11df-8732-00144feabdc0.html).
Cargill, the world’s biggest trader of agricultural commodities, criticised Moscow’s move. “Such trade barriers further distort wheat markets by making it harder for supplies to move from areas of surplus to areas of deficit, and by preventing price signals from reaching wheat farmers,” it said.

Arkady Zlochevsky, president of the Grain Union lobby group, said that the swift imposition of the ban risked undermining Russia’s reputation as a reliable supplier.

The UN on Wednesday attempted to quell growing panic in the markets, saying that fears of a repetition of the 2007-08 food crisis were unjustified.

But it also cut its forecast for global wheat production by 25m tonnes to 651m tonnes, the biggest revision in 20 years, and warned that a continuation of the current weather conditions could affect planting of the next Russian crop, with “potentially serious implications” for global wheat supplies in the 2011-12 season.

Arkady Zlochevsky, president of the Grain Union lobby group, said the government needed to warn exporters ahead of such a decision and give them time to meet existing contracts, according to Interfax. “What are we to do with the grain that has already reached port?” he asked. “We have no mechanisms for returning it.”

The Russian lobbyist also said the Egyptian tenders that Russian traders had fought hard to win could now be under threat. “Russia’s reputation as a reliable supplier of grain could be under threat from such a sharp decision.”

Mr Zlochevsky said it would make more sense to impose a ban later, by September 1 for example, so as to give exporters time to unload contracted supplies.

Mr Putin said the government would disburse Rbs35bn ($1.17bn) in subsidies to agricultural producers. He also added that Russia would use its grain stores for distribution without auction to regions in need.

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The Lawspeaker
05-28-2011, 02:14 PM
Russia Ends Ban on Grain Exports After Domestic Crop Improves

May 28 (Bloomberg) -- Russia will end its grain export ban imposed in August amid a record drought after forecasts for a 28 percent increase in the wheat crop.

The ban won’t be extended after July 1, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said during a meeting with First Deputy Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov outside Moscow today. Russian grain sowing rose 10 percent to 24 million hectares (59 million acres) and the government has over 6 million tons of grain in its reserves, Zubkov, who oversees the county’s agricultural sector, told Putin.

Russia, the world’s second-largest wheat exporter before the ban, halted shipments after its worst drought in at least 50 years. Wheat traded in Chicago, a global benchmark, as much as doubled from June to February.

“Ending the export ban is one of the measures of supporting agricultural producers, who today have export potential,” Putin said.

World food prices that rose to near a record last month have added to inflation that has spurred at least two dozen central banks and the European Central Bank to raise interest rates this year. Costlier food also contributed to riots across northern Africa and the Middle East.

The end of the ban may have a short-term effect on prices, Erin FitzPatrick, part of a team of analysts at Rabobank International in London who correctly predicted the surge in food costs, said before the announcement.

“The weather risks that are developing in other producing regions will be more than enough to offset any type of exports coming of Russia,” she said. “Wheat prices will stay at elevated levels.”'



European Drought


Russia’s wheat exports would boost supplies when drought is curbing crops in France, Germany, the U.K. and the U.S. Without Russia’s export ban, “prices would pare the latest gains, but not fall sharply,” said Carsten Fritsch, an analyst at Commerzbank AG in Frankfurt.

Russia’s wheat exports will be 10 million metric tons, up from 4 million last year, from production of 53 million tons, up from 41.51 million tons, the U.S. Department of Agriculture forecast on May 11. The U.S. is the biggest wheat exporter. Russia’s Agriculture Ministry estimates the total grains harvest may be between 85 million and 90 million tons, up from 60.9 million tons last year.

The government may want to renew the grain export ban if prices rise as shipments resume, SovEcon Managing Director Andrey Sizov Jr. said yesterday.



Food Inflation


“The government is likely to monitor the situation closely due to risk of higher food inflation and may warn of possible ban on exports later this year,” Sizov said.

Grain traders are preparing for exports to resume, and wheat purchases for storage began accelerating about a month ago, according to SovEcon, an agricultural researcher. Grain reserves stand at 14 million tons, half of them held in a state- run fund, SovEcon’s Sizov said May 20.

Favorable weather in Russia aided winter crops and higher temperatures in the second 10 days of May helped to overcome delays to spring sowing, the national weather center said on May 24. Weather will be “good and satisfactory” in European Russia for vegetation of winter crops and development of spring plantings by June 1, the Federal Hydrometeorological Center said on May 27.

Russia’s export ban applied to all grains except rice and flour. The flour ban was lifted on Jan. 1.


Source: Business Week (http://www.businessweek.com/news/2011-05-28/russia-ends-ban-on-grain-exports-after-domestic-crop-improves.html) (28 May 2011)