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Heineken and pig farmers benefit from wheat export ban

24-07-2012 | |
Heineken and pig farmers benefit from wheat export ban

According to Bloomberg Argentina’s policy of capping wheat exports to contain food inflation is having the “perverse effect” of benefiting brewers such as Heineken and cheapening feed for pig farmers in China.

Argentine farmers will boost barley planting by 17% this year at the expense of wheat, which will shrink to the second lowest in a century, the Buenos Aires Cereals Exchange said. Barley escapes President Cristina Fernandez de Kirchner’s export restrictions.
 
Breweries such as Heineken and Anheuser-Busch InBev, the maker of Budweiser, stand to gain as Argentina cheapens one of their main input costs, Raul Maestre, the treasurer of Argentina’s wheat growers association told Bloomberg.
 
Growers are also attracted to barley as rising corn prices are forcing pig and chicken farmers in China to switch to barley as feed, he said.
 
“Farmers are running away from wheat because of this government intervention,” Daniel Miro, president of agro- industrial consultancy Novitas SA told Bloomberg in a telephone interview. “Barley is an emerging cereal.”
 
Farmers traditionally opted to grow wheat instead of barley because of its higher value in export markets, Miro said.
 
Price surge
The value of domestic wheat in Argentina has slumped below $200 a metric tonne, compared with $210 a tonne for feed barley, Maestre said.
 
Wheat futures in the Chicago Mercantile Exchange have surged 49% since mid-June and reached $9.38 a bushel ($345 a metric ton) last week, the highest for a most-active contract since Aug. 21, 2008.
 
Barley, which doesn’t trade on the CME, fetches between $340 and $350 for high-quality cereal bought by brewers overseas and between $300 and $320 for animal feed, Miro said.
 
China’s animal feed importers are lowering their barley quality standards to make up a global grain shortage, Miro said.
 
Saudi Arabia is the biggest importer of Argentine barley because the cereal is preferred as an animal feed to corn, according to Novitas.

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