HomeAbout UsProductsTestimonialsLinks Photo GalleryUseful InfoContact Us
Navigation:    Home
Fonterra Expects Milk Powder Inventories Will Fall, Herald Says Print E-mail
April 20-- Fonterra Cooperative Group Ltd. expects to reduce milk powder inventories amid increased demand from China, the New Zealand Herald reported, citing Chairman Henry van der Heyden.

Fonterra expects to sell 160,000 tons of milk powder in China this year, about three times last year’s sales, van der Heyden said. Demand for foreign milk powder has increased after a scandal over contamination of local milk, the newspaper said.

Inventory levels will probably be back to normal seasonal levels by July 31, van der Heyden said.

 

Latest News

April 20-- Fonterra Cooperative Group Ltd. expects to reduce milk powder inventories amid increased demand from China, the New Zealand Herald reported, citing Chairman Henry van der Heyden.

Fonterra expects to sell 160,000 tons of milk powder in China this year, about three times last year’s sales, van der Heyden said. Demand for foreign milk powder has increased after a scandal over contamination of local milk, the newspaper said.

Inventory levels will probably be back to normal seasonal levels by July 31, van der Heyden said.

 
BANGKOK, April 21- Thailand, the world's biggest rice exporter, plans to open a tender in the next two weeks to sell 3.76 million tonnes of the grain from its stocks, the country's commerce minister said on Tuesday.

Exporters said they feared the move could push Thai rice prices down 10 percent over the next few weeks.

Around 3 million tonnes would be sold through a tender, for export only, while another 760,000 tonnes would be sold on the Agriculture Futures Exchange of Thailand (AFET), Commerce Minister Porntiva Nakasai said.

"We have to release the stocks as the government wants to cut storage costs of up to 137 million baht per month," she told reporters, adding the exact tender date had not yet been set. The Thai currency figure is equivalent to $3.9 million.

Porntiva said the government also wanted to sell some of its stock quickly as it feared prices would drop further if India lifted a ban on rice exports imposed in October 2007 when it was concerned about domestic supplies.

The ban helped push world prices to record highs last year.

India, which vies with Vietnam as the world's second biggest rice exporter, has allowed the export of up to 15,000 tonnes of non-basmati rice to Nepal and was likely to lift a rice export ban after its general elections in May.

The government is likely to suffer a big loss on its rice, which it bought at elevated prices to help farmers.

It paid farmers 12,000 baht ($338) per tonne for paddy during an intervention scheme that ended in February, which would give a price of around $600 per tonne for milled rice for export, well above current market prices of around $550 per tonne.

The government was estimated to hold another 2 million tonnes of rice it bought from farmers in the latest intervention scheme, starting in mid-March, said a Commerce Ministry official.

Under this new scheme, the intervention price is only marginally lower at 11,800 baht per tonne for paddy.

Thailand exported 10 million tonnes of rice in 2008 and is expected to export 8 million tonnes this year.

DEPRESSING PRICES

The Thai Rice Exporters Association said prices could fall around 10 percent over the next few weeks because of the government sale, at a time when demand is weak.

"That amount of 3.76 million tonnes is too big and will definitely depress prices as supply is flooding the market," said Chookiat Ophaswongse, president of the association.

Traders elsewhere agreed.

"If they have to sell such large quantities within two weeks, it will surely drag down prices. Thailand is most expensive at the moment and the impact of this sale will be good for buyers," said a manager with a Singapore-based trading house.

Demand now was thin, and the price of benchmark Thai 100 percent B grade white rice RI-THWHB-P1 would drop further to around $500 per tonne, he said.

The benchmark rice was quoted at $550 per tonne on Tuesday, unchanged from last week.

However, another trader in Singapore said price falls could be limited.

"There's not much being offered from Vietnam, and India is still out of the market, so any downward move in prices will be limited as supplies are a bit tight," the trader said. ($1=35.54 Baht)

 
Boorama-Lug)-Waxa maanta magaalada Boorama soo gaadhay 3 baabuur oo ah nooca looyaqaan Waaraadka oo sida shixnado bariis ah oo lagu qiyaasay 1350 kiis oo bariis ah...
Read more...
 
Thai and Vietnamese rice exporters are planning to make an official declaration that they have no genetically modified rice in production in a bid to enhance their sales on the global market
Read more...
 
Although the government is expecting bumper rice harvest this year due to good monsoon, it has no plan to relax ban on rice exports, Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar said Wednesday.
Read more...
 
Indian sugar futures opened up on Tuesday as low cane acreage and less rainfall in parts of Maharashtra, a leading producer, may lower sugar output more than expected, analysts said.
Read more...
 
Thailand's rice export outlook remains promising, based on the 46% year-on-year rise in volume to 6.3 million tonnes in the first half of the year, according to the Foreign Trade Department.
Read more...
 
Make Quote

TESTIMONIALS

Tate & LyleAlberto Peixoto
Head of Sugar Trading,
Tate & Lyle

Our experience with Omar International Co has proved the Company to be trustworthy, a reliable customer and a long term business partner.
 

Want to learn more?

  • H.O (UAE): +971 4 229 5424
  • Djibouti: +253 357562