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Thailand's efforts to prop up rubber prices by cutting exports have met with some success, but they are likely to run into major headwinds in the next few months. Thailand, the world's biggest producer and exporter of natural rubber, together with Malaysia and Indonesia agreed last year to cut exports by 300,000 tonnes between October and March.
The three nations account for 70 percent of natural rubber exports and the reductions helped benchmark Tokyo Commodity Exchange rubber rally 60 percent from an almost three-year low in September last year to the 2013 peak of 337.8 yen ($3.38) per kilogram reached on February 6. The contract has since slipped to close Thursday at 276.9 yen and the chances are that Asian rubber prices will come under further pressure, even if Thailand is successful in convincing the other two major Southeast Asian producers to extend export restrictions.
Inventories of rubber in top importers China and Japan are at multi-year highs and demand from the automobile sector, the major rubber-consuming industry, is expected to be muted. This suggests that Chinese and Japanese rubber users may choose to use up inventories in coming months rather than continue importing.
Since the beginning of 2009, there has been a fairly strong correlation between Tokyo rubber prices and Chinese inventories, with prices gaining in tandem with stocks but falling when they are run down. Rubber inventories in warehouses monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange rose 1.5 percent in the week ended March 29 from the prior week, and at 117,696 tonnes are the highest since February 26, 2010.
The three-year high in China is doubled by a six-year peak in Japan, where rubber stocks reached 15,799 tonnes in the week to March 31, the highest since 2007, according to data from the Rubber Trade Association of Japan. Plentiful inventories and slower growth in automobile sales in China may curb the appetite of the world's biggest importer.
Chinese vehicle sales are expected to rise a lacklustre 7 percent in 2013, marking the third consecutive year of single-digit growth, according to a forecast by the China Association of Automobile Manufacturers. However, sales for this year have been stronger than the forecast, gaining 13.2 percent in the first quarter from the same period a year earlier.
But even if car sales do surprise on the upside, the plentiful inventories and the rise in rubber prices since last year's lows may curb import appetite in China, which has been strong so far this year. Natural rubber imports rose to 230,000 tonnes in March, a 21.1 percent gain over the same month last year and the highest monthly total since November 2011. The first quarter also saw inbound rubber shipments gain 31.7 percent over the same period a year earlier as Chinese buyers took advantage of the lower prices that prevailed toward the end of last year.

Copyright Reuters, 2013

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