Business News of Saturday, 7 September 2019

Source: laudbusiness.com

‘Pig meat’ costly on international market – FAO

According to the FAO, the increase reflected higher international price quotations for pigmeat According to the FAO, the increase reflected higher international price quotations for pigmeat

The Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has said the August 2019 FAO Meat Price Index rose by 0.5 percent, up to 12.3 per cent from its value at the beginning of the year.

According to the FAO, “the increase reflected higher international price quotations for pigmeat, underpinned by strong import demand from China, where the African Swine Fewer has curtailed domestic production.

“The FAO Dairy Price Index rose by 0.5 percent from its July level, reversing sharp falls registered in the previous two months, as price quotations rose for cheese, Skim Milk Powder and Whole Milk Powder."

Generally, the FAO said in a report that global food prices declined in August, a situation that was driven by sharp falls in the prices of staple cereals and sugar.

The FAO Food Price Index, which tracks monthly changes in the international prices of commonly traded food commodities, averaged 169.8 points in August 2019, down 1.1 percent from July while still up 1.1 percent from its August 2018 level.

The FAO Cereal Price Index declined by 6.4 percent from the previous month. Maize values turned sharply lower due to expectations of a much larger than previously anticipated harvest in the United States of America, the world’s largest maize producer and exporter. Wheat prices also remained under downward pressure, reflecting ample export availabilities, but those of rice edged up, due to seasonal effects as well as concerns over the impact of weather on crops in Thailand.

The FAO Sugar Price Index was down 4.0 percent from July, due largely to the weakening of the Brazilian real, as well as prospects of larger shipments by India and Mexico.

By contrast, the FAO Vegetable Oil Index rose by 5.9 percent in August, hitting an 11-month high amid a rebound in global import demand for palm oil as well as unfavorable weather conditions in Indonesia’s major growing regions. Soy oil prices also rose, driven in part by lower than anticipated crush volumes in North America.