STAT Communications Ag Market News

World Food Prices Eased in September

ROME - Oct 4/18 - SNS -- World food prices eased in September in the face of growing inventories and initial expectations of burgeoning supplies.

The latest FAO Food Price Index dropped 1.4% from August and 7.4% below the same month last year to average 165.4 points in September.

The FAO cereal price index dropped 2.8% to 164, led by maize as expectations of a large crop in the United States pushed export quotations down. International prices of rice and wheat also fell during the month, the latter due primarily to ongoing strong sales and shipments from the Russian Federation.

STAT Communication's world pulse price index inched up 1% in September to average 130.48 points down 25% from a year ago because of diminished import demand from India. Drought in Australia added some support, while increased demand for peas for use in livestock feed helped stabilize that market.

The FAO vegetable oil price Index posted its eighth consecutive monthly decline, dipping 2.3% to a three-year low 134.9 points. Palm oil prices registered the sharpest decline, as large inventories in major exporting countries weighed on price quotations, which are now 25% below their level of a year ago.

The FAO dairy price index declined 2.4% to average 191.5 September, continuing its downward trend, while the FAO meat price index slipped marginally from its revised value for August to 166.2 for September.

The FAO Sugar Price Index is 21% below its September 2017 level, while it rose 2.6% from August to 161.4 as ongoing harvesting operations in Brazil, the world's largest producer and exporter, point to drought conditions having had a negative impact on sugarcane yields. Sub-par monsoon rainfall in India and Indonesia also provided upward support to international sugar prices.


FAO Raises Its 2018 Cereal Production Forecast

With its Cereal Supply and Demand Brief, FAO raised its forecast for this year's global cereal production to 2,591 million metric tons (MT), still 2.4% below the record high of 2017.

Reduced rainfall in Australia and Canada are expected to lower wheat yields, which, however, should be offset by higher outputs in Algeria and the Russian Federation. U.S. maize production is expected to reach its second highest level on record, more than offsetting downward revisions made for Russia. Global rice production is anticipated to rise 1.3%, surpassing last year's all-time high, spurred by evidence of greater Asian plantings than previously expected, especially in India.

FAO expects world cereal utilization to rise to 2,647 million MT in the 2018-19 season, up 1.1% from the estimated level for the previous year. Global trade in cereals is expected to approach 417 million MT, about 1.0% less than the record level of the 2017-18 marketing season. International trade volumes of wheat and rice are expected to decline, while those for maize to increase.

World cereal stocks by the close of seasons in 2019 are forecast at 751.3 million MT, about 7% below their record-high opening level, with significant drawdowns of wheat inventories expected in the European Union and the Russian Federation.

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