Thailand to Surpass India as Top Rice Shipper on Stockpiles
Thailand is set to overtake India as the world’s
largest rice exporter as the nation accelerates sales from state stockpiles,
adding to record global supplies, according to the International Rice Research
Institute.
Shipments from India may drop to as low as 7 million
metric tons in the year that began Oct. 1, said Samarendu
Mohanty, a senior economist. Exports including the
aromatic basmati variety more than tripled to 10.4 million tons the previous
year, said the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Thailand plans to ship 8.5
million tons in 2013 from 7.3 million tons this year, according to the
Department of Foreign Trade.
Rising Thai supplies may increase competition among
Asian producers and pressure prices that have risen 1.2 percent
in Chicago this year. A decline in the staple for half the world may further
lower food costs that the United Nations’ Food & Agriculture Organization
estimates dropped 0.9 percent in October from a
six-month high. Global opening stockpiles for 2012-2013 will climb to the
highest in a decade, the USDA says.
Thai Reserves
Thailand’s stockpiles are poised to climb to a
record 12.1 million tons by the end of 2012-2013 from 9.8 million tons a year
earlier, the USDA estimates. The country will be forced to sell some of the
rice it bought from farmers to make space for the new harvest, said Mohanty.
Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra implemented a price-support policy to boost
incomes of farmers who helped her Pheu Thai party win
an election last year. The government guaranteed as much as 15,000 baht ($489)
a ton for unmilled white rice, about 50 percent more than local market rates, and 20,000 baht for a
higher-quality variety.
India is set to export 7.25 million tons in
2012-2013 and Thailand will ship 8 million tons, USDA data show. Vietnam may
sell 7 million tons, becoming the third-biggest shipper.
The free-on-board price of 25 percent
broken long-grain white rice in Thailand costs as much as $540 a ton compared
with $385 in India, said Vijay Setia, former
president of the All India Rice Exporters’ Association. Most Indian rice
exports are the 25 percent broken variety, he said.