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Global meat prices drop 2.7% - FAO

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World food commodity prices declined for the third month in a row during April.

Posted on May 08 ,08:34

Global meat prices drop 2.7% - FAO

The economic and logistical impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic resulted in significant contractions in demand for many food commodities in April, according to the FAO Food Price Index, which averaged 165.5 points in April, some 3.4 percent lower than the previous month and 3 percent lower than April 2019.
From sugar to vegetable oil, dairy, meat and cereal, all food commodities traded globally have declined for the third month in a row. The FAO Meat Price index declined by 2.7%. A partial recovery in import demand from China was insufficient to balance a slump in imports elsewhere, while major producing countries suffered logistical bottlenecks and a steep fall in demand from the food services sector due to shelter-at-home measures.

"The COVID-19 pandemic is hitting both the demand and supply sides for meat, as restaurant closures and reduced household incomes lead to lower consumption and labour shortages on the processing side are impacting just-in-time production systems in major livestock producing countries," said FAO Senior Economist Upali Galketi Aratchilage.
The FAO Dairy Price Index fell by 3.6 percent, with butter and milk powder prices posting double-digit drops amid increased export availabilities, mounting inventories, weak import demand and diminished restaurant sales in the northern hemisphere.

The FAO Sugar Price Index has received the main hit, going down 14.6% from March, when it posted an even larger monthly drop. On the opposite side, the FAO Cereal Price Index declined only marginally, as international prices of wheat and rice rose significantly while those of maize dropped sharply. International rice prices rose by 7.2 percent from March, due in large part to temporary export restrictions by Viet Nam that were subsequently repealed, while wheat prices rose by 2.5 percent amid reports of a quick fulfillment of the export quota from the Russian Federation. Prices of coarse grains, including maize, by contrast, fell by 10 percent, driven down by reduced demand for its use for both animal feed and biofuel production.

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