Friday, 20 July 2012

Corn exports from India may hit record of 3.5 mt in 2011-12

REUTERS
Posted: Friday, Jul 20, 2012
Mumbai:
Corn exports from India could hit a record 3.5 million tonne in the 2011-12 marketing year to September, spurred by higher global prices and a bumper harvest, the India representative of a major US grains export association said on Thursday.

India is Asia’s second-largest grower of corn after China but it is not a significant global exporter of the grain. It mainly sells to Malaysia, Indonesia and Vietnam, which seek small cargoes for prompt delivery.

India exported about 3.2 million tonne of corn in 2010-11, traders said. It harvested 21.6 million tonne in the 2011-12 crop year which ended in June, slightly lower than the record 21.7 million tonne of the previous year.

Domestic consumption is pegged at around 17-18 million tonne annually.

So far, Indian traders had shipped nearly 3.1 million tonne and they could easily ship another 400,000 tonne in the next two months, US Grains Council India representative Amit Sachdev told Reuters. The US Grains Council is a private organisation based in Washington that works to build export markets for US barley, corn and sorghum.

A weak rupee and a rally in global corn prices has made it attractive for Indian traders to sell corn to feed millers in countries such as Malaysia, Vietnam and Indonesia despite a surge in the domestic prices, Sachdev said.

Indian traders also have the advantage of surplus corn availability, while others are facing shortages due to higher demand from China, he added. China is likely to boost imports to four million tonne in the 2011-12 crop year from an estimated 1.3 million in 2010-11, a Reuters poll showed.

The August corn contract on the National Commodity and Derivatives Exchange (NCDEX) hit a record high of 1,557 rupees per 100 kg on Wednesday, spurred by global prices and also because of worries about patchy monsoon rains.

US corn also jumped to an all-time high on Thursday, rising above $8 a bushel as the worst drought to hit the US Midwest in 56 years continues to curb grain yields. Indian corn is quoted at around $300 a tonne, including cost, insurance and freight to Southeast Asia compared with $330 to $340 being offered for South American corn.

In June, Vietnam rejected 6,300 tonne of Indian corn and soyameal due to an insect infestation, but Sachdev said quality controls had improved. India’s corn output next year may be affected by the lower than average monsoon rains so far this season, although industry officials and traders are optimistic the rains will increase in the next few weeks.

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