JM Innovations



National & World Ag News Headlines
FAO Food Price Index Declines in November
USAgNet - 12/11/2018

Globally traded food commodity prices declined in November, led by marked drops for palm oil and other vegetable oils, according to the Food and Agriculture of the United Nations.

The FAO Food Price Index averaged 160.8 points for the month of November, down 1.3 percent from October and 8.5 percent from a year earlier. The index, an indicator of the monthly change in international prices of a basket of food commodities, is now at its lowest level since May 2016.

The FAO Vegetable Oil Price Index hit a 12-year low, declining 5.7 percent from October. Large palm oil inventories and abundant supplies of soy and sunflower oils fueled the decline.

The FAO Cereal Price Index, covering wheat, coarse grains and rice, dropped 1.1 percent during the month, reflecting large export supplies of wheat, intensified export competition for maize and new crop arrivals of rice.

The FAO Dairy Price Index declined for the sixth consecutive month, falling 3.3 percent from October, as large stocks and increased availability of export supplies - especially from New Zealand - led to lower price quotations for butter, cheese and whole milk powder.

The FAO Sugar Price Index defied the downward trend, rising 4.4 percent in the month. The increase was mostly due to a significant production decrease expected in Brazil, which has also lowered the share of sugarcane used to produce sugar to 35.8 percent from almost half a year ago.

The FAO Meat Price Index came in marginally lower, with only bovine meat prices rising during the month.

FAO also released a new Cereal Supply and Demand Brief, marking down its forecast for world cereal production in 2018 to 2 595 million tonnes, some 2.4 percent below the record high reached last year.

The new forecast figures do not incorporate recent and significant historical revisions made by China to its grain production estimates, for maize in particular, which are under review by FAO with an eye to updated assessments early next year.

FAO expects greater planting of winter wheat crops in the northern hemisphere as well as higher maize production in much of the southern hemisphere, although the prospects of a possible El Nino event impair the outlook in South Africa and neighboring countries.


Other National Headlines
Ag-Bag
Professional Dairy Producers Foundation
Copyright © 2024 - Farms.com. All Rights Reserved.