Showing posts with label high food prices. Show all posts
Showing posts with label high food prices. Show all posts

Monday, May 04, 2009

Why Agriculture Prices Have Held Up Remarkably Well

A recent piece in The Economist highlighted the recent strength of agriculture prices in the face of the downturn, and the reason for it.

Though prices of the meats, grains, and softs are still off their 2008 highs - they're not off by much anymore - as commodities such as cotton, soybeans, and sugar are starting to rally in a big way. 

How could this be?  Aren't we in a Depression?  Perhaps, but supply has come offline in a big way, while demand has remained strong.  As the Economist piece points out: "No matter how bad things get, people still need to eat."

It's looking like, though there were many bubbles in 2008, China's food consumption was not one of them.  Back to the article, with some staggering numbers:

China’s role has been profound, reflecting its enormous economic progress and huge population. In the past decade, says Carlo Caiani of Caiani & Company, an investment-advisory firm based in Melbourne, the consumption of milk has grown seven-fold, and that of olive oil six-fold. China is consuming twice as much vegetable oil (instead of less healthy pork fat), 60% more poultry, 30% more beef and 25% more wheat, and these are merely the obvious foods. Scores of niches have expanded dramatically: people are drinking four times as much wine, for example.

And yet even with all this growth, people in China still, on average, consume only one-third as much milk and meat as people in wealthy countries such as Australia, America and Britain. The gap is even larger with India, which is also growing fast. Overall, protein intake in Europe and America is unlikely to expand much, but a combination of rising incomes and population in developing countries could increase demand by more than 5% annually for years to come. “Once people are accustomed to eating more protein, they won’t take it out of their diet,” says Mr Caiani.


And remember, many food stock levels are at historic lows.  Unless new supply comes online soon - and I don't know where that supply is going to come from - we could be in for a whale of a rally in food.



Further reading about investment opportunities in agriculture:

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Food Shortages Discussed at G8 Summit

On Saturday, agricultural ministers from the world's (roughly) eight most industrialized nations, met in Italy to discuss the looming threat of food shortages and a global food crisis.

America's agricultural secretary warned that unless many countries take substantative steps to increase food production, there will be increasing shortages and social unrest around the world.

For more details, you can click here to listen to Stratfor's short podcast summary of the event.

Are you also skeptical these world improvers will be able to have their way?  Me too - and I think the day will soon come again when us "evil speculators" can profit from skyrocketing food prices...muhahahahaha.


Tuesday, June 24, 2008

Financial Speculators and Congressional Stupidity

Hallelujah for our forward looking government leaders, now on the lookout to protect us innocent civilians from those evil speculators who lurk in the night.

What fools we were for believing that supply and demand, government mandates for corn based ethanol, and a national policy to turn the US dollar into toilet paper have been contributing factors to this historic commodity bull run.

I look forward to the next chapter in government intervention, where our federal and state heroes take a bad problem and make it considerably worse by meddling in an issue in which they have no clue.

There are, however, a few rogue information sources that do not yet believe that evil speculators are the sources of all our worldly problems. I encourage you to take a look at these articles while you still can, before they are wiped froodity speculators, commm existence in the name of homeland security.

Friday, May 09, 2008

Financial Times: IMF warns on global inflation

In an indication the commodities boom may not be the bubble imagined, Mr Lipsky said the forces pushing prices up “appear to be fundamental in nature” – and these were being amplified by lower US interest rates and the dollar’s decline.

Full article

Friday, February 29, 2008

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