Feed millers in Vietnam bought some 20,000 tonnes of Indian corn this week for shipment in July, while buyers in the Philippines are in talks to import 50,000 tonnes of Australian feed wheat for August arrival. Indian corn to Vietnam was traded around $248 a tonne, including cost and freight (C&F), while Manila is expected to pay between $290 to $295 a tonne for Australian feed wheat, traders said.
"In the Philippines they have 30 percent import duty on corn which discourages imports," said one trader with a global trading company in Singapore. "They will continue to buy expensive feed wheat." Asian grain processors were showing interest after staying on the sidelines for a couple of weeks with global grain prices recovering after a decline.
US soyabeans are up around 5 percent this week, the biggest weekly rise since mid-October, corn has gained more than 6 percent after two weeks of decline and wheat is up 3 percent following an almost 10 percent slide last week. "There is a view among some of the buyers that prices might go higher, so there is some covering taking place," another Singapore trader said. "But people are also keeping an eye on the euro zone crisis."
Vietnam has been snapping up Indian corn cargoes, taking advantage of competitive prices. Last week, one large feed mill bought 30,000 tonnes of July and August arrival, paying between $250 and $255 a tonne, C&F. This compares to South American corn being offered at $265 a tonne and US corn around $275 a tonne for July shipment.
India could also be in the market selling wheat with government's stocks climbing to an all-time high. India's wheat inventory at government warehouses surged to a record 50.2 million tonnes on June 1, exposing more stocks to rot as unattractive global prices have hobbled government efforts to export from its overflowing grain bins. Global grains traders are closely watching India's move to subsidise grain exports as stocks become unmanageable with some expecting a discount of around $20 to $30 a tonne. South Korea's largest feedmaker Nonghyup Feed is seeking up to 170,000 tonnes of corn for arrivals between July and December via tenders which close later on Friday.
Japan, which has been slow in buying corn this year because of higher prices, has yet to cover some 450,000 tonnes for August delivery. It is open for bulk of the need for September, traders said. "Mills have been slow in buying corn because it was expensive," said one Tokyo-based trader. "Buyers expect corn prices to come down further because of a large US crop."
Japan's farm ministry bought 180,537 tonnes of milling wheat from the United States, Canada and Australia, as much as it offered, in a weekly tender. South American soyabean meal being offered in Asia's cash market rose between $10 and $15 a tonne to $540 a tonne C&F, almost at par with cargoes being offered from India. The benchmark Chicago soyameal has risen about 7 percent this week, driven by higher soyabean values and strong demand.