Log In   |  Register Free Newsletter Subscription
Skip navigation
Zibb
Subscribe to Manufacturing Business Technology
FirstLight 
Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS

Seismic price shifts, changing global diets put the squeeze on food processors

By Staff -- Manufacturing Business Technology, 5/1/2008 12:00:00 AM

It doesn't take but a cursory glance at most agricultural commodity prices to know something seismic is occurring, and food processors are caught in the middle of thin margins and big cost increases.

Some startling incongruities in agricultural commodities in recent months:

  • Bumper crop harvests are followed by a record rise in trading prices—e.g., wheat jumping 25 percent in one day, combined with world grain reserves depleted to a 60-year low, and less than a 50-day supply on hand.

  • After four successive years of record harvests, China imposes a 20-percent export duty on wheat, barley, and oats. India imposes export taxes as well.

  • Russia and others embargo wheat shipments, while the Chinese are losing farmland to urbanized development. And while better wages in China are driving up demand for protein-rich diets, the government is leasing land in the Philippines to plant crops.


In a classic supply-and-demand scenario—with demand rapidly trending toward outstripping supply on a long-term, global basis—food processors are caught in the middle of thin margins and big cost increases.

It's classic supply and demand, with demand rapidly trending toward outstripping supply on a long-term, global basis.

Compounding the changes in global diets, food and energy markets are merging to a degree with government mandates for biofuels to reduce dependence on oil. Congress recently enacted the 2007 Energy Act (superseding the 2005 act) boosting targets, and pushing ethanol into second place this year for claim on the U.S. corn crop.

“The bottom line is a convergence of the energy and agricultural sectors,” says Joseph Dancy, adjunct professor, oil and gas law at Southern Methodist University Law School and manager of a $20-million private mutual fund, of which he's moved 30 percent into agricultural commodities in the last six months.

“Outside of market analysts, I don't think most people realize yet how large a move in grain prices there has been. Price charts look like moon shots,” claims Dancy.

It's good news, Dancy adds, for fertilizer, farm equipment, and irrigation system manufacturers. “But food processors are on a roller coaster," he says. "They will have to get more efficient—and they're pretty efficient now. They will have to decrease margins and raise prices—probably both.”

Change in world diets also is a huge driver on demand.

“As income in developing countries goes up, people want to move up the food value chain,” says Ned Schmidt, publisher of Agri-Food Value View, a commodities newsletter based out of Boca Raton, Fla. “This isn't going to end anytime soon.”

Email
Print
Reprints/License
RSS
Talkback
Reed Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Most Recent Resources

Advertisement

Related Microsite Content

Related Links

More Content
  • Blogs
  • Webcasts
  • Podcasts

Jim Brown

PLM and Profitability

Jim Brown, President and founder of Tech-Clarity
November 12, 2009
Research Rap: Role of Component and Compliance Information in Supply Risk Management
A quick peek into some research on … the importance of good supply chain...
More

Roberto Michel

Operation Green

Roberto Michel, Senior Contributing Editor, Manufacturing Business Technology
November 11, 2009
Plant-focused software vendors correlating energy with production management
The last few days have seen more announcements from plant automation software...
More

VIEW ALL BLOGS RSS
  • Enterprise PLM


    Is your company ready for Enterprise PLM?

    Enterprise product life-cycle management (PLM) encompasses nine business processes—among them the much-embraced Design for Supply and Cost. This podcast sets up the relationship between PLM software and Enterprise PLM processes in basic terms, including the bonuses found in time-to-market and product quality.

    Sarvesh Jagannivas
    Speaker: Sarvesh Jagannivas
    Vice President of Marketing for Oracle’s Agile PLM software group
    Sidney Hill
    Moderator: Sidney Hill
    Executive Editor of Manufacturing Business Technology
    Hear It Now

Advertisement
Wonderware
NEWSLETTERS
Mid-Day Report
Innovation Strategies
Intelligent Manufacturing
Lean Enterprise



Please read our Privacy Policy

About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   FREE Subscription   |   Affiliate Links   |   RSS
© 2009 Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Please visit these other Reed Business sites