August 2, 2012

 

Russia's 2012 Mexican beef imports likely up 29%

 

 

Russia's Mexican beef imports in 2012 may rise 28.5% to US$150 million, while in terms of volume, imports may grow 25-30% on year to 32,600-33,900 tonnes.

 

Reynaldo Tovar, the president of the Mexican Beef Exporters Association said Wednesday (Aug 1) that the forecast was based on the dynamics of supplies in January-May when Mexico's exports grew 93% on the year to 17,050 tonnes. He added that the on-year pace of the growth in supplies will slow in upcoming months.

 

Russia is expected to account for 25% of the total Mexican beef exports in 2012, thus ranking second after the US.


East Asian nations import around 150 million tonnes of wheat, corn, soybeans and soymeal annually, and even an average annual increase of us$50/tonne can translate into an additional US$7.5 billion, much of which is passed on to consumers despite price control measures.

 

Cash market prices of wheat have risen by about US$75/tonne in the last two months, corn by US$85/tonne and soymeal by US$160/tonne.

 

Near-month soybeans and corn for August and September delivery on the Chicago Board of Trade hit a record high of US$17.7775 a bushel and US$8.2875 July 20. September wheat hit a four-year high of US$9.4725 July 23. The three contracts are now trading around US$17.00, US$7.92 and US$8.66. The futures are off highs but that hasn't translated into lower cash market prices.

 

For several decades, the US has been Asia's biggest supplier of agricultural commodities. And Asian dependence on the US, particularly for soybeans, was expected to be even bigger this year due to drought in many parts of South America.

 

The condition is aggravated by the ongoing wheat harvest in the Black Sea region has also been hit by dry weather and Russia's wheat exports in 2012-13 may fall 59%, the International Grains Council said on Friday (July 27). In India, monsoon rainfall is so far 21% below the long-term average.

 

The US supplies more than half of world's corn but now domestic buyers such as Smithfield Foods Inc. and Pilgrim's Pride Inc. plan to import it from Brazil to cut costs. "It is hard to justify why an importer would book US corn when we can't even get our own processors to take it," Karl Setzer, an Iowa-based analyst with MaxYield Cooperative, said.

Video >

Follow Us

FacebookTwitterLinkedIn