Rice price dives as US and Japan set to unlock massive hidden surplus

Fisher

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Fair use
http://business.timesonline.co.uk/tol/business/industry_sectors/natural_resources/article3943779.ece

Rice price dives as US and Japan set to unlock grain pact
Times OnlineMay 16, 2008
Leo Lewis, Asia Business Correspondent

Rice prices nosedived today as Japan moved closer to unlocking its massive hidden surplus and bullish supply forecasts routed speculators.

The price collapse came as commodity experts called on Japan and the US to urgently unwind one of the biggest “invisible” distortions in global rice markets: a quirk of World Trade Organisation rules that obliges Tokyo to buy grain it does not need and effectively turns millions of tons of high-grade American rice into feed for Japanese pigs.

If that distortion were removed, said researchers at the Washington-based Centre for Global Development (CGD), and the 1.5 million tons of unwanted US rice were released from Japan’s storage silos, the crisis that has sent the price of the crop that feeds half the world would be instantly solved. Rice prices, suggested the group’s forecasts, could even halve between now and June.

Standing in the way of that, however, is a rule that prevents Japan from re-exporting its reserves of US rice without permission from Washington – permission that has not been forthcoming until now, but which The Times has learned may be just hours away from being granted.

A concerted political effort, said CGD researchers, would “prick the speculative bubble” that has recently sent rice prices into the stratosphere. “What’s needed now is a sudden surge of unexpected supplies…to reassure anxious countries and poor people around the world that there is indeed enough rice for everybody,” they wrote in a new report.

Benchmark rice futures indexes plunged 5 per cent on Friday amid a frenzy of sell orders that pushed the key contract below the $20 per 100lb mark. Traders in Tokyo and Hong Kong described a wave of panic among the “new money” that has streamed into global soft commodity markets in recent months.

Behind the sharp drop, which contributed to a 14 per cent collapse in the rice price over the week, were forecasts of a good harvest and suggestions that some of the recently imposed export restrictions on rice might be relaxed. Pakistan today said that it would allow 1 million tonnes of rice to be exported.

Traders warned, however, that many of the factors that have propelled rice prices to their recent highs remain in place. The destruction of Cyclone Nargis has effectively turned Burma from an exporter to the global rice economy to an importer and export restrictions from India and Vietnam remain firmly in place.
 

dissimulo

Membership Revoked
Nice. Free markets work so much better when governments institute all kinds of crazy rules to improve them.
 

Y2kO

Inactive
All this stuff is artificially manipulated isn't it?

That's what markets are made for - for the elite to get rich and the little guy to lose his shirt (and starve to death).


(Shut them down.)
 

Wise Owl

Deceased
Well good, maybe our local store will get a little more rice on the shelves besides the instant crap.....there was virtually nothing there earlier this week....I just took a look and walked on by.

Now if they would just find a few million tons of wheat stashed somewhere that is being fed to pigs that could go on the market......for humans. And stop diverting the corn to ethanol.........
 

Walrus Whisperer

Hope in chains...
I see exactly whats going on here. First, create a massive "demand"-"oh, no, theres no rice, better stock up". Let the sleeple stew on that for a few eeks. THEN, "oh, we had PLENTY all along" to make the sleeple feel ashamed of their "hoarding" behavior when there was plenty all along and resolve to never stock up again.
I get it.
Do you?
:whistle:
 

truthseeker

Inactive
1.5 million tons is a massive hoard? That's probably a few weeks of world demand at most.

Flavius Aetius

Supply and demand, evrery slight increase in shortage can greatly effect prices. Since noone is out of rice and in fact others have stockpiled rice on yheir own, this could clearly prick the rice bubble. Now if we could do that with oil, it would be nice. Still dont understand the huge egg bubble, perhaps bird flu in the east. I wouldnt think the last too long for global import/export.
 

BV141

Has No Life - Lives on TB
Several weeks bcak the price of silver dropped (due to a massive increase in margin requirements) but all the supplier were out of Silver (in part because the US mint shut down for several weeks....at the same time!)

For the times were live in, a decrease in the price of rice doesn't mean there will be more rice on the shelves....

bv
 
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