Global wheat supply to crisis levels; big China stocks
won't provide relief
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[August 22, 2018]
By Nigel Hunt
LONDON (Reuters) - A scorching hot, dry
summer has ended five years of plenty in many wheat producing countries
and drawn down the reserves of major exporters to their lowest level
since 2007/08, when low grain stocks contributed to food riots across
Africa and Asia.
Although global stocks are expected to hit an all-time high of 273
million tonnes at the start of the 2018/19 grain marketing season,
according to U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates, the problem is
nearly half of it is in China, which is not likely to release any onto
global markets.
Experts predict that by the end of the season, the eight major exporters
will be left with 20 percent of world stocks - just 26 days of cover -
down from one-third a decade ago.
The USDA estimates that China, which consumes 16 percent of the world's
wheat, will hold 46 percent of its stocks at the beginning of the
season, which starts around now, and more than half by the end.
The 126.8 million tonnes China is estimated to hold is up 135 percent
from 54 million five years earlier.
"People need to get rid of China stocks (in their calculations) ... if
you do that, it's just exceptionally tight," said Dan Basse, president
of AgResource Co in Chicago.
A repeat of the 2007/2008 crisis, which forced many countries to limit
or ban exports, is unlikely in the absence of other drivers at the time,
including $150-per-barrel crude oil <LCOc1>.
The recent three-year high for wheat prices of $5.93 a bushel on the
Chicago Board of Trade <Wc1> pales in comparison to the high of
$13.34-1/2 a bushel in February 2008.
Importers in North Africa also appear to be better placed this time,
with higher stocks of their own.
"It could have an impact on food inflation but in North African
countries they have a good crop this year, fortunately, so their
reliance is not as big as in the past years," said Abdolreza Abbassian,
chief economist at the United Nations’ Food and Agriculture Organisation
(FAO).
"I don’t think we want to be alarmist in terms of consequences," he
added.
China started stockpiling wheat in 2006, setting a guaranteed floor
price to ensure food security and stability.
At around $9.75 a bushel as of last week, Chinese prices are now so high
that they cannot sell internationally without incurring a major loss.
Rabobank analyst Charles Clack said he expected China to continue to
build stocks into next year but in the long-term it would look to reduce
reserves by curbing domestic production, reducing imports or conducting
internal auctions.
"It will be a slow process ... I wouldn't expect exports to come flying
out anytime soon," he said.
Government wheat reserves now total nearly 74 million tonnes, according
to Shanghai JC Intelligence Co Ltd, most of it from 2014-2017 but a
small amount as old as 2013.
Sylvia Shi, analyst at JC Intelligence, said China would continue to
import wheat it cannot produce in sufficient volumes to help meet a
growing appetite for high-protein varieties for products like bread and
other baked products as diets become Westernised.
For a related graphic, click https://tmsnrt.rs/2nHO2NY
DROUGHT
The wheat crop in several of the world's biggest exporters - Argentina,
Australia, Canada, the European Union, Kazakhstan, Russia, Ukraine and
the United States - has suffered this year.
A spring drought in the Black Sea bread baskets Russia and Ukraine was
swiftly followed by a summer heatwave in the European Union. Dry weather
now also threatens crops in another important exporter, Australia.
Evidence of the serious harm done has grown as harvesting progresses.
[to top of second column] |
Arnaud Caron, a French farmer drives an old Mc Cormick F8-413
combine as he harvests his last field of wheat, in Vauvillers,
northern France, July 23, 2018. REUTERS/Pascal Rossignol
Forecasts for the 28-member European Union have repeatedly been cut, with
Germany set for its lowest grain harvest in 24 years after crops wilted under
the highest summer temperatures since records began in 1881.
Russia's agriculture ministry held a meeting with grain traders on Friday to
discuss export volumes.
The ministry denied export limits were discussed but traders, some of whom were
at the meeting, said curbs might be imposed later in the season following
complaints from domestic meat producers about the rising cost of animal feed.
The United States is best placed to capitalize on a shortfall in global supply,
with much higher stocks than rival exporters and rising production.
The outlook provides a much-needed boost for U.S. farmers caught in the
crossfire of a trade war with China, a huge importer of U.S. soybeans and corn,
as well as Mexico and Japan, two of the top buyers of U.S. wheat.
"The winner in the long term is the U.S. as they should get some demand flow
back to them. It has been several years since we have seen the U.S. be in a
position to get demand," said Matt Ammermann, a commodity risk manager with INTL
FCStone.
The Black Sea and Europe look set to lose market share, Ammermann said.
Canada, one of the world’s biggest high-quality wheat exporters, is expected to
enjoy bigger yields than last year, according to a recent crop tour. But patchy
rains have left crops highly variable across the western provinces.
"We don’t have a bin-buster coming. I just don’t see how we can push exports too
much higher,” said Paterson Grain trader Rhyl Doyle.
For a related graphic, click https://tmsnrt.rs/2KU6ADO
SOUTHERN RESPONSE
The two major wheat exporters in the southern hemisphere, Argentina and
Australia, are still months away from harvest.
A record crop is forecast in Argentina but production in Australia is expected
to fall to the lowest level in more than a decade due to drought across the east
coast.
Francisco Abello, who manages 7,000 hectares of land in western and
north-central Buenos Aires province, said he and other growers are out to take
advantage of high prices by investing in fertilizers to increase yields.
"We are having a great start to the season," Abello said. "The ground was moist
at planting time. Then it was cold and dry, which are the best conditions for
the early wheat growing season."
The Buenos Aires Grains Exchange has a preliminary wheat harvest estimate of 19
million tonnes, above what it says is the current record of 17.75 million
tonnes.
In Australia, the outlook is less rosy. Analysts said production could fall
below 20 million tonnes for the first time since 2008, although it is still
likely to be well in excess of that year's crop of just 13 million tonnes.
"The west of the country is looking good so the largest producing region could
produce a crop in excess of 9 million tonnes alone. That may keep the headline
number up," said Phin Ziebell, an agribusiness economist at the National
Australia Bank. "But with dry weather reducing output on the east, it could
reduce exports nationally."
(Additional reporting by Julie Ingwersen in Chicago, Dominique Patton and Hallie
Gu in Beijing, Rod Nickel in Winnipeg, Sybille de La Hamaide and Valerie Parent
in Paris, Hugh Bronstein in Buenos Aires and Colin Packham in Sydney; Graphics
by Amanda Cooper; Editing by Veronica Brown and Sonya Hepinstall)
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