Analysis-As wheat prices soar, the world's consumers vote with their
feet
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[August 03, 2022] By
Naveen Thukral and Bernadette Christina
SINGAPORE/
JAKARTA (Reuters) - Global wheat
consumption is headed for its biggest annual decline in decades as
record inflation forces consumers and companies to use less and replace
the grain with cheaper alternatives, amid growing food insecurity.
Consumers may face even higher wheat prices in the second half of 2022
as importers, who until now have supplied cargoes bought several months
earlier at cheaper prices, pass on the costs from when wheat prices
scaled decade highs in May.
Global wheat consumption in July-December could drop by 5%-8% from a
year ago, analysts, traders and millers say, much faster than the U.S.
Department of Agriculture's forecast 1% contraction.
"There is going to be a drop in wheat demand for animal feed in Europe
and China. Wheat demand for human consumption has also slowed in key
importing countries around the world," said Erin Collier, an economist
at UN's Food and Agriculture Organisation.
"High prices have raised food security worries in parts of Asia and
Africa where countries are not able to secure enough supplies from the
international market."
GRAPHIC: World wheat prices
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Millions are facing mounting food costs and insecurity after Russia's
invasion of Ukraine and adverse weather in key exporting countries drove
cereal prices to all-time highs.
Benchmark wheat futures jumped 40% this year to a record high in March
before retreating recently, though physical prices remain high.
Wheat shipments from the Black Sea region are quoted at around $400-$410
a tonne, including cost and freight for delivery to the Middle East and
Asia. Prices are down from a peak of about $500 a tonne reached a few
months ago, but remain well above last year's average of about $300.
"Wheat supplies are still super tight," said Ole Houe at brokerage IKON
Commodities in Sydney. "We are not sure how much wheat is going to come
out of the Black Sea and there is adverse weather in other exporting
countries."
Countries likely to struggle with wheat imports include Yemen, South
Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Ethiopia, Afghanistan and Sri Lanka, FAO's Collier
told Reuters.
As rising costs strain household budgets, protests have erupted across
the world with people taking to the streets from China and Malaysia to
Italy, South Africa and Argentina.
In Indonesia, the world's second-largest wheat buyer, consumption
already fell in the first five months of 2022 and a bigger decline is
expected as higher costs feed through the supply chain.
GRAPHIC: World wheat consumption
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Yan Aisa Allamanda, a 37-year-old baker in Jakarta, is paying around
10,000 rupiah ($0.6720) per kilogram for wheat flour, up from around
8,200 rupiah earlier this year.
"I had to increase my selling price...but I fear that higher prices will
discourage consumers," she said.
SWITCHING OUT
As consumers cut purchases, bakers and noodle manufacturers are
replacing wheat with rice.
"Wheat flour prices are almost at par with rice - automatically there
will be shifting," said Franciscus Welirang, chairman of the Indonesian
Flour Millers Association.
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A detail view of a wheat field in Perwez, Belgium, July 28, 2022.
REUTERS/Yves Herman
He noted the last time wheat flour prices rose significantly, Indonesia's
consumption dropped by 4.5%.
While wheat prices have jumped, Vietnam's 5% broken rice was quoted around $404
per tonne, largely unchanged from late 2021.
GRAPHIC: High wheat prices
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Brazil, the biggest market for U.S. wheat, saw purchases decline more than 3% in
January-June period, even though the country paid 20% more for the staple, data
showed.
"In the northeast of Brazil, maybe consumers will replace wheat products with
regional ones, like tapioca," said Roberto Sandoli, senior risk manager at
HedgePoint Global Markets.
ANIMAL FEED
Red-hot wheat prices are also changing ingredients livestock farmers use for
animal feed.
The French Farm Office FranceAgriMer forecasts demand for wheat feed is likely
to drop 13% to 3.9 million tonnes in 2022/23 from 2021/22.
"The drop in EU wheat consumption is mainly the consequence of very cheap corn,"
said Helen Duflot, analyst with Strategie Grains. "Then of course, there is the
economic issue."
In Vietnam, one of the world's fastest growing animal feed markets, rice is
replacing wheat.
One purchasing manager at a mill in Ho Chi Minh City said they have been asked
by the government to source alternatives amid supply chain disruption.
Thailand had earlier this year increased its corn import quota to 600,000 tonnes
from 54,700 tonnes, and cut import duties to alleviate a tight feed market,
Bangkok-based traders said.
In response to changing feed use, the USDA in July cut its global wheat
consumption forecast for the 2022/23 marketing year to 784.22 million, down 1.77
million tonnes from its June estimate and 6.29 million tonnes below the prior
year.
BLACK SEA HIT
Buyers in Africa and the Middle East have been impacted more than other
consumers by Black Sea disruptions since Russia's invasion of Ukraine, and have
been forced to switch to higher-priced suppliers such as Germany and France.
There are hopes of a resumption in Black Sea supplies after Russia, Ukraine,
Turkey and the UN signed a deal last week to unlock Ukrainian grain. The first
grain ship to leave Ukraine safely anchored off Turkey on Tuesday.
But the market remains sceptical about Black Sea trade making a more meaningful
return.
"We are not hugely optimistic on Ukrainian wheat supplies," said one trader in
Singapore. "It is not in Russia's interest to allow large volumes of grain
exports from Ukraine with the ongoing war."
($1 = 14,880.0000 rupiah)
(Reporting by Naveen Thukral in Singapore and Bernadette Christina in Jakarta;
additional reporting by Ana Mano in Sao Paulo, Mark Weinraub in Chicago, Gus
Trompiz in Paris, Chayut Setboonsarng in Bangkok and Phuong Nguyen in Hanoi;
editing by Gavin Maguire and Sam Holmes)
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