Tea prices in Bangladesh rose at the weekly auction for the fourth time in a row on strong demand for quality leaf, while sales rose despite higher volume on offer. Bangladeshi tea fetched an average of 238.34 taka ($2.7) per kg at the auction centre in the port city of Chittagong on Tuesday, compared with 229.59 taka at the previous sale.
There was strong demand for quality tea and buyers were ready to pay premiums that perked up prices, while sales rose even though supplies were greater than last week, an official at National Brokers said. Only 0.6 percent of the 1.54 million kg offered in the auction was left unsold. At the previous auction, around 1.13 million kg was offered, of which 1 percent went unsold.
Bangladesh's tea production dropped to nearly 79 million kg in 2017 from a record 85 million kg the previous year, which officials attributed to excessive rainfall. The South Asian country was the world's fifth-largest tea exporter in the 1990s, but is now a net importer as the surge in domestic consumption is in line with economic growth.