BANGKOK—Thailand, the world’s biggest rice
exporter, will sell 1.1 million tons of stockpiled rice to
foreign buyers as it makes room for rice purchased under a
domestic buying scheme, the Commerce Ministry said.
The rice, part of a 2.1 million-ton
government stockpile, may be sold through private, barter or
government-to-government deals, Deputy Commerce Minister Banyin
Tangpakorn said.
"We have to release some rice to make space
for the new buying scheme which will buy up to 2.5 million tons
from farmers," he said of the plan to prop up local prices.
Thai 100 percent B grade white rice, the
benchmark for the physical market, fell to $830-$850 per ton on
Wednesday from $900-$930 per ton last week, traders said.
"We will have no problem selling the 1.1
million tons because we have had several inquiries from rice
importing countries," Banyin said, without naming the countries.
In Manila, an official at the Philippine
government’s grain-importing arm told Reuters it had no plan yet
to buy some of the 1.1 million tons from Thailand.
The Thai price is down nearly 20 percent from
a high of $1,050 per ton on May 22, when many farmers rushed to
sow more land than usual to cash in on climbing prices.
Thai paddy rice, the raw unmilled grain that
farmers sell to millers, has fallen 40 percent in the last two
weeks to 9,000 baht ($276) per ton from 15,000 baht, twice as
steep a decline as the end-product milled rice.
The domestic buying scheme was announced on
Wednesday after rice farmers threatened to blockade major roads
into Bangkok on Friday to urge the government to halt the price
slide.
Banyin said the 2.5 million tons would be
purchased in June and July at a fixed price of 14,000 baht per
ton.
The government traditionally keeps a
stockpile of rice as a buffer to guard against crop failures,
and as a mechanism to ensure a stable price for consumers and
exporters.
The easing in rice prices is the latest sign
of easing concerns about shortages of Asia’s staple food.
Farmers in Thailand and neighbouring Cambodia
and Vietnam are all looking to harvest large rice crops in June
and July, suggesting the near trebling of prices this year after
export curbs by India and Vietnam might have been an
over-reaction.
Leading importers such as the Philippines,
whose aggressive buying at the start of the price rally pushed
the market even higher, also appear to be waiting for the market
to weaken before moving in to replenish stocks.
"The market was quiet with no fresh demand
from overseas buyers, while supply is increasing," said one Thai
exporter.
Vietnam, which vies with India for the mantle
of the second biggest exporter, is looking at a 6 percent
increase in its May crop, the year’s largest, and Cambodia has
lifted export curbs as its worries in March about a domestic
shortfall evaporated.
Hanoi has already said it expects to lift an
export ban in July, but with a 3 percent duty to limit overseas
sales.
Exporters and millers in Thailand, which
normally gets around 4.2 million tons from an additional June
crop, say the harvest is likely to be around 4.7 million tons as
many farmers sowed more land than usual to cash in on the
climbing prices.
However, with domestic fuel and fertilizer
costs soaring because of climbing world oil prices, rice prices
cannot fall too far before the farmers who borrowed heavily to
finance the additional planting start to feel the squeeze.
Traders said the slightly weaker baht that
has resulted from the last week’s political concerns was also
adding to the decline in export prices, which are quoted in US
dollars.
The baht was at 32.68 to the dollar on Wednesday, down from
32.40 last week. —Reuters