Double whammy for food buyers as freight costs spike amid high grain
prices
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[July 09, 2021] By
Naveen Thukral and Gavin Maguire
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Rising costs to ship
crops globally are adding to concerns about food inflation that are
already at decade-highs and hitting cost-sensitive consumers in
import-dependent markets.
The cost of bulk carriers that move grains and oilseeds from production
hubs in the Americas and Black Sea to key consumers have roughly doubled
from last year due to rising fuel costs, tighter vessel supply and
longer port turnaround times amid COVID-19 curbs, according to grain and
shipping sources.
"Freight cost has become a real challenge as it comes when we see huge
increases in grain prices," said Phin Ziebell, agribusiness economist at
National Australia Bank in Melbourne.
"For years, buyers enjoyed low grain and freight prices. I see no
immediate end to high freight costs."
Crop shipping costs surge on key routes as higher fuel costs, slower
turnaround times bite
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gfx/ce/jbyvrzezjve/
CropShippingCosts.png
The cost of moving grains from Australia to Southeast Asia has risen to
$30 a tonne from $15 last year, and to $55 from $25 from the U.S.
Pacific Northwest to Asia, shipping sources said.
Ships carrying wheat from the Black Sea to Asia now cost around $65 a
tonne, from around $35 last year.
"It is the cost of bunker fuel and the cost of bulk ships lifting the
prices of carrying grains," said one trader at a leading brokerage in
Singapore. "We also have COVID-19 quarantine requirements slowing cargo
movement."
FUEL TO THE FIRE
With world food prices having risen at their fastest pace in over a
decade in May, the spike in crop freight costs poses a fresh challenge
to food importers and policymakers attempting to keep inflation levels
in check just as several key economies reopen following coronavirus
lockdowns.
Global food price index hits 10-year highs after steep climbs in key
crop prices
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gfx/ce/xlbvgqzqgvq/
FAOvsKeyCrops.png
And the price of key crops like corn and soybeans are set to remain
elevated and volatile through the rest of the northern hemisphere
growing season as crops develop.
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Corn is piled in the back of a vehicle in a field on the outskirts
of Jiayuguan, Gansu province, China September 28, 2020.
REUTERS/Carlos Garcia Rawlins/File Photo
FAO Food Price Indexes climb to multi-year highs, especially edible oils
& cereals
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gfx/ce/oakvedjlrpr/
FAOFoodPriceIndices.png
Chicago corn futures are up roughly 90% from a year ago on strong global
demand and stressed crops in the United States, while soybeans are up
more than 50% after drought clipped output in top grower Brazil. Wheat
is up around 30% from a year ago following growing problems last season.
DOUBLE WHAMMY FOR BUYERS
The double whammy of higher crop and freight prices is pinching buyers
in Asia, the top crop consuming region and home to China that accounts
for more than half of the world's soybean purchases. Japan is one of the
world's biggest corn buyers.
Key food & crop shipping rates surge as COVID restrictions contort
supply lines
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/bdwpkoygxpm/
ContainersvsBADI.png
For a typical wheat buyer in Indonesia, the world's second-largest wheat
importer, the cost of a 50,000-tonne cargo of food-grade wheat from the
Black Sea has jumped by $4 million from a year ago to around $15
million, with the freight cost alone rising by $1.5 million.
Crop price volatility is another challenge.
Benchmark corn futures lurched more than 10% higher in the last week of
June before slumping 10% the following week as weather forecasts shifted
market sentiment.
Crop price volatility is making buyers unsure about how to take a market
position
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/nmovaxoznpa/CZ1Volatility.png
"We have seen a drop in consumption with these high prices," said a
procurement manager at a flour milling company with operations across
Southeast Asia. "It is difficult to take a position in a market like
this. Millers are reducing purchases."
(Reporting by Naveen Thukral; Editing by Himani Sarkar)
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