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The FAO Food Price Index, which monitors monthly changes in international prices for a basket of widely traded food commodities, averaged 124.4 points in September, reflecting a 3.0% rise from August and a 2.1% increase compared to the same period last year.
The sugar price index registered the largest increase in September, rising by 10.4%. This was driven by worsening crop prospects in Brazil and concerns that India’s decision to lift restrictions on sugarcane use for ethanol production may affect export availabilities from the country.
The cereal price index increased by 3.0% during the month, led by higher wheat and maize export prices. International wheat prices increased due largely to concerns over excessively wet conditions in Canada and the European Union, though this was partly offset by competitively priced supplies from the Black Sea region.
World maize prices also climbed, influenced by low water levels on key transportation routes along the Madeira River in Brazil and the Mississippi River in the United States of America. By contrast, the FAO All Rice Price Index declined by 0.7 %, partly reflecting generally quiet trading activities.
The vegetable oil price index increased by 4.6% from August, with higher quotations across the board for palm, soy, sunflower and rapeseed oils.
The rise in international palm oil prices was due to lower-than-expected production in major Southeast Asian producing countries, while the rebound in soyoil quotations was primarily due to lower-than-expected crushings in the United States of America.
The dairy price index rose by 3.8% in September, with quotations up for whole milk powder, skim milk powder, butter and cheese.
The meat price index increased by 0.4%, mainly due to higher poultry meat prices driven by strong import demand for Brazil’s products. World bovine and pig meat prices remained stable, while those for ovine meat declined slightly from August levels.
FAO raised marginally its forecast for global cereal production in 2024 to 2 853 million tonnes, reflecting upward revisions to rice and wheat outputs that outweighed a small reduction made to global coarse grains production.
The new figure, also published in the new Cereal Supply and Demand Brief, remains moderately below the record output of 2023.
World wheat production is expected to increase by 0.5% in 2024 from the previous year, as improved yield prospects in Australia more than compensate for a significant cut to the European Union’s forecast due to excessively wet conditions.
By contrast, global production of coarse grains is now expected to decline by 0.8% from 2023, with smaller crops in the European Union foreseen to outweigh higher maize output anticipated in the United States of America.
World rice production in 2024/25 is now forecast to rise by 0.9% and reach a historical high of 539.2 million tonnes.
World cereal total utilisation is forecast to rise by 0.4% to 2,853 million tonnes in 2024/25, while global cereal stocks are predicted to expand by 1.2%, with rice stocks seen increasing three times faster. This results in a global cereal stocks-to-use ratio of 30.6%, which FAO considers “adequate supply prospects in the new season.”
International trade in cereals is now forecast at 488.1 million tonnes, representing a 2.7% contraction from the 2023/24 level. However, it is seen that increasing imports from Africa and the Near East could spearhead a recovery in international rice trade in 2025.