Record Chinese wheat prices raise risk of pricier
noodles
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[June 02, 2022] BEIJING
(Reuters) - Chinese consumers are likely to have to pay more for food
staples like noodles and bread this year, as record wheat prices in the
world's top consumer of the grain get passed on to food makers, traders
and analysts said.
Wheat harvested in China in recent weeks is being sold at around 3,200
yuan ($477) per tonne, about 30% higher than a year ago and the highest
level on record, despite stable demand.
Surging farming costs and tight stocks have pushed up prices that are
also being supported by worries that heavy rain last year could lead to
a smaller crop.
Global wheat supplies are also tight due to the war in major exporter
Ukraine.
Prices of refined flour are already up more than 10% in China since the
beginning of the year, to record highs, according to data from Mysteel,
a China-based consultancy, and may rise further if wheat costs keep
climbing.
Graphic: China flour prices (https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/zgvomeejdvd/
ChinaFlourCosts.png)
The farming cost for wheat in 2021/22 was around 575 yuan per tonne, up
about 100 yuan from the previous year, due to rising fertiliser and seed
prices, according to Mysteel data.
"Everything is so much more expensive now. With nitrogen alone, prices
have jumped about 100 yuan per bag," said a farmer surnamed Zhang in
Hebei province, who only gave her family name.
She estimated the cost for winter wheat was as high as 700 yuan per
tonne because the crop was planted late last fall due to heavy rain.
SUBSIDIES
Beijing has issued three rounds of subsidies to farmers so far this year
amid concerns that high costs will impact output in the food
security-obsessed country, but that money has yet to trickle down to
growers who have been reluctant to sell their grain cheaply.
Traders have also been reluctant to lower prices as overall supplies
remain tight following strong wheat demand last year from animal
feeders.
"Corn prices were high. Old (crop) wheat supplies in the end were tight,
and prices hit 3,500 yuan per tonne, so new wheat continued the rally
and started off (this season) high," said a China-based grains trader.
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Noodles shop owner Wang Zongxing makes noodles for customers at his
restaurant in Shenzhen, Guangdong province, China May 15, 2020.
Picture taken May 15, 2020. REUTERS/Martin Pollard
While feed producers and livestock farmers have been daunted by the high price
of wheat this year, they remain regular wheat buyers as corn prices also remain
elevated.
"If the feed sector is not buying, the supply situation will be much better,"
said another grains trader.
GRAPHIC:Chinese wheat prices have scaled record highs in 2022 (https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/ce/znvneoojqpl/
ChinaWheatCash.png)
And despite the ongoing harvest which will continue through late-June,
replenishing supplies, the price of wheat is set to reach at least 3,400 yuan
per tonne in the fourth quarter, when Chinese wheat demand peaks and people eat
more starchy foods in the cold weather, traders and analysts said.
HANGING IN THERE
High wheat prices are squeezing flour mills, which are struggling with
overcapacity and weak demand during the traditionally low consumption season.
"Milling plants were not actively buying at the moment. Only some are buying for
the necessary need to restock," said Lv Fengyang, analyst with the agriculture
section of Mysteel.
She estimated at least 70% of millers are losing money.
Fine flour makes up about 70% of the profits for wheat processing at milling
plants, while the rest comes from sales of byproducts that mainly go into animal
feed.
"Food flour prices have basically stabilised at the moment," said a trader with
a major milling plant in China. "But higher wheat prices will eventually be
passed on to end products."
($1 = 6.7050 Chinese yuan renminbi)
(Reporting by Hallie Gu and Dominique Patton; Editing by David Holmes)
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