India’s rice rates steady at record highs, Vietnam activity picks up
RATES of parboiled rice exported from India held record high levels hit this week even as demand was subdued from African buyers, while Vietnam saw increased trading activity after the holiday period.
India’s 5 per cent broken parboiled variety was quoted at a record US$542 to US$550 per tonne this week, unchanged from last week when limited supplies pushed prices to a record high.
“African buyers are having a tough time swallowing these higher prices. They’re hitting the pause button for now,” said a Mumbai-based exporter.
Pakistan’s rice exports are likely to jump to a record high in the year ending in June as rival India’s decision to curb its own shipments forces buyers to purchase more from Islamabad, which is offering the grain at nearly 16-year-high prices.
In Vietnam, 5 per cent broken rice was offered at US$637 to US$640 per tonne, compared with the US$635 to US$640 range before the holiday, traders said.
Trading activities became more robust after a week-long Chinese New Year or Tet break.
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“Supplies are stronger after Tet, both buying and selling activities picked up,” said a trader based in the rice bowl of Mekong Delta.
Thailand’s 5 per cent broken rice prices were quoted at US$610 per tonne, sliding down from last week’s prices of US$630, tracking a weaker baht.
There is a downwards pressure on prices, said a Bangkok-based trader, adding Thailand did not participate in the Indonesian auction and that new supply would gradually come out next month.
Demand was very thin and internal prices have also fallen, another trader said.
Traders expect Thai prices to continue following a downward trend. REUTERS
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