Friday, June 7, 2024

The UN's FAO Food Price Index Was Up 0.9 Percent In May

And for some reason, although noting the trend change, the FAO seems to be downplaying the increases.

From the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations, June 7:

FAO Food Price Index slightly up in May: higher cereal and dairy prices offset easing sugar and vegetable oil quotations

» The FAO Food Price Index* (FFPI) stood at 120.4 points in May 2024, up 1.1 points (0.9 percent) from its revised April level, as increases in the price indices for cereals and dairy products slightly more than offset decreases in those for sugar and vegetable oils, while the meat price index was almost unchanged. Although it registered a third consecutive monthly uptick in May, the FFPI remained down 3.4 percent from its corresponding value one year ago and 24.9 percent below the peak of 160.2 points reached in March 2022.

» The FAO Cereal Price Index averaged 118.7 points in May, up 7.1 points (6.3 percent) from April, but still 10.6 points (8.2 percent) below its May 2023 value. Global export prices of all major cereals rose month-on-month, with wheat prices increasing the most. The sharp monthly rise was largely due to growing concerns about unfavourable crop conditions for the 2024 harvests, possibly constraining yields in some main producing areas of several major exporting countries, including in parts of Europe, Northern America and the Black Sea region. Additionally, damage to the Black Sea shipping infrastructure exacerbated the upward pressure on prices. Maize export prices also increased in May, reflecting production concerns in both Argentina (due to crop damage from the spread of Spiroplasma disease) and Brazil (due to unfavourable weather), along with limited farmer selling activity in Ukraine amidst seasonally tightening supplies and a strong global demand. Spillover effects from the wheat markets also affected maize prices. For other coarse grains, world prices of barley and sorghum also rose in May. The FAO All Rice Price Index edged up by 1.3 percent in May, driven by higher Indica quotations, influenced by expectations of sales to Indonesia and Brazil, and easing harvest pressure.

» The FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index averaged 127.8 points in May, down 3.1 points (2.4 percent) month-on-month, yet standing 7.7 percent above its year-earlier level. The index decrease was mostly driven by lower palm oil quotations, more than offsetting higher soy, rapeseed and sunflower oil prices. International palm oil prices declined for the second consecutive month in May, as outputs across major producing countries in Southeast Asia seasonally increased amid a protracted weak global import demand. By contrast, world soyoil prices rebounded in May, broadly underpinned by increasing demand from the biofuel sector, particularly in Brazil. Meanwhile, sunflower and rapeseed oil prices also firmed, mainly reflecting, respectively, seasonally diminishing export availabilities in the Black Sea region and the likelihood of tightening supplies in the upcoming 2024/25 season.

 

» The FAO Dairy Price Index averaged 126.0 points in May, up 2.3 points (1.8 percent) from April, pushing the index value 4.3 points (3.5 percent) above its corresponding value a year ago. International price quotations for all the dairy products represented in the index rose in May. Increased demand from the retail and food services sectors ahead of the summer holidays and market expectations that milk production may fall below historical levels in Western Europe, coupled with seasonally softening milk production in Oceania, underpinned the increase in dairy price quotations in May. In addition, renewed import demand for spot supplies, especially from some countries in the Near East and Northern Africa, contributed to the increase in dairy prices.

 

» The FAO Meat Price Index* averaged 116.6 points in May, down marginally (0.2 points or 0.2 percent) from April and standing 1.5 points (1.3 percent) below its corresponding value one year ago. International prices of poultry and bovine meats fell, while those of pig and ovine meats increased. The drop in world poultry meat prices reflected increased exportable availabilities amid lower internal demand in some major producing countries, whereas the slight drop in bovine meat prices was caused by a sluggish import demand coupled with ample exportable supplies from Oceania. By contrast, the month-on-month increase in world pig meat prices was underpinned by a demand uplift and lingering supply tightness, mainly in Western Europe. Meanwhile, ovine meat prices rose due to higher global purchases, despite the abundant exportable supplies in Oceania....

....MUCH MORE