undefined
undefined
Malaysia, Indonesia seek to buy Australian wheat
Posted by Labels: Australia, Indonesia, Malaysia, WheatFlour millers from Indonesia and Malaysia are negotiating deals to buy some 200,000 tonnes of high-protein Australian milling wheat for April shipment, while Vietnamese buyers are in market for March arrival corn.

"Most millers in Asia are short on high-protein wheat, so they are looking at Australian cargoes," said a trading manager with an international trading company in Singapore.
"They have been postponing purchases, expecting prices to fall." Australian prime hard wheat with 11.5 percent protein was quoted at around $325 a tonne, including cost and freight, into Southeast Asia, compared with US hard red winter wheat with similar protein scales being offered at $335 a tonne.
Dark northern spring wheat from the United States was quoted this week close to $400 a tonne, C&F.
A global demand-supply report from the US Department of Agriculture on Thursday showed larger-than-expected supplies of corn and soybeans even as a severe drought curbed yields in Brazil and Argentina.
Chicago wheat slid almost 1 percent on Friday, falling for a fourth straight session and touching its lowest in almost two weeks, while soybeans and corn lost more ground.
Wheat is down 3 percent so far this week, corn has shed 1.6 percent and soybeans have lost about 1 percent, all on course to snap a three-week rising streak.
Japan's farm ministry bought 75,742 tonnes of milling wheat from the United States and Canada, the volume it had sought, in a weekly tender.
In the feed grain market, Vietnam and Malaysia are seeking new-crop South American corn for April shipment.
"They haven't signed any deals yet, but we expect them to contract some cargoes next week," said another Singapore trader.
0 comments:
Posting Komentar