Big Asian rice buys raise spectre of scramble for supply

BANGKOK,  (Reuters) – Fresh demand for rice in two big  Asian countries is sending a worrying signal the region’s main  staple may join a surge in prices for other grains, worsening  Asia’s spiralling food inflation.

Asian rice traders say aggressive buying in heavily  populated Indonesia and Bangladesh could spread, pushing up  world rice prices even though bumper crops in Thailand and  Vietnam should mean ample supplies.

“This is only the start of the panic buying,” said Ker Chung  Yang, commodities analyst at Singapore-based Phillip Futures,  referring to Bangladesh’s recent tripling of its rice import  target and Indonesia’s purchase this week of 820,000 tonnes of  Thai rice, nearly five times the volume initially sought.
“I expect we’ll have more countries coming in and buying  grain.”

Still, analysts see little risk of a 2008-like food crisis,  when rice prices rose above $1,000 a tonne, double their current  level.
Vietnam’s rising supply and lower imports from the  Philippines, the world’s top importer last year, could mean rice  continues to defy a broader trend of fast-rising global prices  for wheat, soybeans and other foods.

Thailand’s benchmark 100 percent B grade white rice  <RI-THWHB-P1> was offered at $540 per tonne yesterday, unchanged  so far this year after falling 13 percent last year. In  comparison U.S. wheat and corn futures have risen by  more than half since the start of last year.

A sustained rise in the price of rice, a staple in the diets  of nearly half the world’s population, would squeeze the budgets  of millions of Asians living near the poverty line, raising the  risk of unrest in a reprise of the 2008 food security crisis.

The aggressive purchase by Indonesia, a country of 230  million people, seems aimed more at bringing down 20-month high  inflation, a view reinforced after the country followed up yesterday by scrapping import duties on rice, soybeans and wheat.

“The Indonesian buying is a classic example of countries  doubling their imports of rice in a very short span of time,”  said one Singapore-based trading manager with an international  trading company.

“The way Indonesia has bought smells of food security fears  rather than genuine demand.”
Indonesia bought 820,000 tonnes of Thai rice, more than four  times the 170,000 tonnes it initially tendered for.
In Bangladesh, an impoverished country of 150 million people  and South Asia’s biggest rice buyer, traders reported panic  buying and hoarding following a 50 percent rise in local rice  prices over the past year.

This month it tripled its import target to 900,000 tonnes  for the year to June 30 to cool prices.
“There is panic buying among consumers and a sense of  insecurity as millers and middlemen hold back rice expecting  better profits,” said Badrul Hasan, director for procurement at  the Directorate General of Food, the state grain buyer.

FEARS OF UNREST

World leaders meeting in Davos said on Thursday that soaring  food prices risked stoking more unrest and even war, but top  executives there rejected calls for curbs on commodity  speculation.
The U.N. food agency has said food prices hit a record high  in December, surpassing levels in 2008 that sparked riots.
But  while weather shocks are disrupting supplies, there has been no  repeat of the leap in energy and fertiliser prices or of the  widespread hoarding of three years ago.
Most experts doubt Asia is on track for a spike in rice  prices of the magnitude of 2008 when governments made desperate  attempts to secure supplies amid widespread unrest.

“It is not the baseline scenario but it is one of the risk  scenarios that we face,” said Leif Eskesen, chief economist for  India and Southeast Asia at HSBC.
He said, however, there was a chance of sustained higher  food prices, including for rice, because of a resurgence of  demand in developing regions such as Southeast Asia, where  ultra-low interest rates have caused millions to splash out in  department stores and spend more on food.  “Some of these food prices are remaining elevated and part  of that is because demand has been quite strong,” said Eskesen.

“The broader message is even if they stay elevated for two  to four months, they can start to spill over to inflation  expectations.
And that is really the main concern as we see it  here, that that is starting to happen,” he said. U.S. wheat futures touched a 29-month high on Thursday as  buyers scrambled for supplies amid harsh weather in major  producing countries like Australia and Russia.

AMPLE SUPPLIES
Whether rice follows other food prices higher is no sure  bet.
Vietnam, the world’s second-largest exporter after Thailand,  was forecast to enjoy a bumper next crop, while the Philippines,  the top buyer, has said it would halve imports in 2011.  But traders said food security fears could trump  fundamentals. Thailand expects rice prices to steadily rise,  said Korbsook Iamsuree, the head of the Thai Rice Exporters  Association

“Food prices have gone up but rice hasn’t really gone up  substantially, but that is the trend,” she told Reuters. “We  expect rice prices to go up this year.”
With elections in Nigeria, usually the world’s  second-largest rice importer, there could be some urgency to  stock up on rice to ensure stable food prices.
“Factors are pointing towards the possibility of a rally in  rice prices,” said another Singapore-based commodity trader.
“It will not be due to supply constraints but it will  essentially be food security fears and the general food complex  moving up.”