SEARCH RESULT

Monday, March 30, 2015
Pakistan seeks exporters' help on exporting excess wheat
Exporters are being called to come up with a plan to export Pakistan's surplus wheat, the Express Tribune reported. Those excesses are kept by the Pakistan Agricultural Storage & Services Corporation (Passco) as well as local provinces.
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
10% drop in Indian wheat procurements due to rain
No Abstract
Monday, March 23, 2015
China Whey Weekly: Market strengthens further (week ended Mar 22, 2015)
Demand for whey improved lately as feed millers stockpiled depleting inventories. Traders continued to lift prices while stocks were limited due to reduced import volume. Prices of whey should stay firm in the near term with supplies tight. ...
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
Wheat conditions in US states drop last week
Wheat conditions in the US states of Oklahoma and Kansas declined last week while those of Texas were picking up slightly, according to a weekly report released on March 16, Monday. One of the ratings applied for Kansas wheat stood at 41% f ...
Wednesday, March 18, 2015
China Whey Weekly: Whey prices rise further despite falling import costs (week ended Mar 15, 2015)
FOB prices of US feed-grade dropped to the range of US$660/tonne to US$924/tonne as distributors slashed prices in a bid to clear bloating stocks.
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
Robust wheat production, fewer exports seen for EU in 2015-16
Wheat inventories in the European Union are expected to rise to a record level in six years as total harvest is forecast to stay above 150 million tonnes and exports are seen declining this year.
Tuesday, March 10, 2015
China Whey Weekly: Traders lift prices amid tighter supply (week ended Mar 8, 2015)
The availability of whey, particularly the supply of high-protein products, tightened as deliveries from the US were disrupted due to the strikes in the west coast ports. Although demand was not exceptionally strong, whey traders lifted pri ...
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Egypt buys 110,000 tonnes of wheat from Russia and Ukraine
Egypt's state grains buyer General Authority for Supply Commodities (GASC), has purchased 110,000 tonnes of wheat from Russia and Ukraine. According to the GASC, it bought Russian wheat at US$258 per tonne and Ukrainian wheat at US$254.5/to ...
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
Sluggish wheat output in India seen this year
No Abstract
Tuesday, March 3, 2015
China Whey Weekly: Market faces slack demand, higher import costs (week ended Mar 2, 2015)
Whey market was quiet during and after the Chinese New Year holidays, which officially ended on February 24. Not many feed millers have resumed operation, and with piglet population limited, they were not keen to procure whey.
Friday, February 27, 2015
Good prospects seen for India's 2015 wheat crop: official
India's wheat crop prospects for 2015 appeared to be better than last year's on good weather conditions, a top farm ministry official told Reuters. "So far, the crop health and overall prospects look better than last year, but we are watchi ...
Monday, February 23, 2015
Evonik: In Asia where 'the action is'
Last November the Germany-based chemicals giant Evonik Industries opened a US$625 million methionine plant in Singapore, its largest and most modern. Why in Asia?
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
Russia to fulfil one million tonnes of undelivered wheat exports
Russia is still obligated to deliver one million tonnes of wheat which were signed for before the government imposed export restrictions on the grain, Reuters reported. Arkady Zlochevsky, the head of the Grain Union, the farmers' lobby, lam ...
Wednesday, February 18, 2015
Kansas U researchers develop wheat with better heat tolerance
No Abstract
Tuesday, February 17, 2015
China Whey Weekly: Prices stay flat on light demand (week ended Feb 15, 2015)
Piglet prices rebounded lately, but lent little support to China's whey market. As sow population continued to fall for the seventeenth consecutive week, low piglet production resulted in slack piglet feed demand, hence decimating the sales ...

Follow Us

FacebookTwitterLinkedIn