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Rubber falls to 5-year low as China supplies compound Thai glut

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  • Rubber falls to 5-year low as China supplies compound Thai glut

    http://www.chicagotribune.com/sns-wp...909-story.html

    Rubber tumbled to the lowest in five years amid rising stockpiles in China, the world's largest user, and an oversupply in Thailand, the biggest producer.

    Prices dropped as much as 4.4 percent in Shanghai and 3 percent in Tokyo. Inventories monitored by the Shanghai Futures Exchange rose 1.6 percent to 166,328 metric tons on Sept. 4, the highest in four months, bourse data show. Global production will outpace demand by 371,000 tons in 2014, the Singapore-based International Rubber Study Group said last month. Thailand started selling stockpiles while it also tries to reduce the glut by felling older trees.

    "There is a surplus in the global market and demand is not catching up to the growth in supplies," Anu Pai, an analyst at Geojit Comtrade in Kochi, India, said Tuesday. "Chinese warehouse data last week showed that stockpiles are rising and there are concerns over demand from there. Moves by Thailand to offload state stockpiles have raised worries of oversupply."
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    Rubber for January delivery on the Shanghai Futures Exchange closed down 4 percent at 13,530 yuan a ton, the weakest since March 2009. The February contract on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange dropped 2.9 percent to 191 yen a kilogram, the lowest since July 2009. Prices this year have declined 25 percent in China and 30 percent in Japan.

    Thailand will expand the area it will clear of aging trees by 33 percent to 400,000 rai (64,000 hectares) a year in the season starting in October, Prasit Meadsen, acting director of the Office of the Rubber Replanting Aid Fund, said Sept. 4. The program, to be implemented for seven years, will cut supply by 27,000 tons annually, he said.

    The country meanwhile plans to unload all rubber it holds in state stockpiles, starting with 100,000 tons it already agreed to sell and a similar-sized shipment soon, Chanachai Plengsiriwat, managing director of Thailand's Rubber Estate Organization, said Sept. 2.

    The global surplus will narrow to 202,000 tons next year, according to an Aug. 13 e-mail from the International Rubber Study Group.

    Inventories worldwide will reach 3.79 million tons by the end of 2014 and 4.33 million tons by 2015, according to The Rubber Economist Ltd. Reserves will increase to the equivalent of 3.9 months of consumption at the end of 2014 from 2.5 months a year earlier, the London-based independent researcher said by e-mail on Aug. 15.

    Manufacturing in China slowed in August for the first time in six months and property sales have weakened, raising concern the country may miss its 7.5 percent growth target this year.

  • #2
    http://thailandchatter.com/showthrea...ull=1#post9414
    http://thailandchatter.com/showthrea...ll=1#post45112

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    • #3
      Leaders of Thai rubber farmers threaten protests as prices slide
      Apornrath Phoonphongphiphat
      Wed, 10 Sep 2014

      BANGKOK, Sept 10 (Reuters) - More than 10,000 rubber farmers in Thailand, based mostly in the south, are preparing to launch protests against the government and demand it announce measures to help them counter a slump in prices to five-year lows, farmers' leaders said on Wednesday.

      These protest moves would involve farmers disrupting work at rubber factories in southern Thailand and marching to the capital Bangkok to submit a letter to the agriculture minister, they said.

      "More than 10,000 (rubber) farmers will come for the protests," Perk Lertwangpong, chairman of the Rubber Cooperative of Thailand grouping, told Reuters.

      Rubber farmers in Thailand, the world's biggest producer and exporter of the fibre, threatened to stage protests last month too, but have so far not acted upon it. Such protests would infringe the martial law that prevails in Thailand since the army took control of the country in May.

      "Now, we don't fear any law, as we have been suffering for such a long time with no help," Perk said, adding the protests will be targeted at the factories who are depressing prices of the fibre, but will not involve blockage of roads.

      Tokyo rubber futures prices, which set the global trend, fell on Wednesday to their lowest level since 2009, as concerns about oversupply and weak demand from top consumer China sparked heavy selling by speculators.

      The price of Thai unsmoked rubber sheet (USS3), which farmers sell to factories, was at 45-49 baht per kg on Wednesday, a far cry from the record 180 Thai baht ($5.6) per kg farmers earned when benchmark smoked rubber sheet (RSS3) surged to an all-time high of $6.40 per kg in 2011.

      Amnuay Yuthitam, another leader of a farmers' network in 14 southern provinces, said: "We would plan the protest early next week to pressure the government to do something to support us."

      Farm minister Pitipong Pungboon Na Ayudhya could not be reached for comment.

      The former populist government of Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra spent 22 billion baht building rubber stockpiles under state-funded price support programmes that included buying the commodity at above-market rates.

      The programme mirrored a money-guzzling rice subsidy programme that cost taxpayers billions of dollars and fuelled opposition to the government from the establishment.

      The new military government of Prime Minister General Prayuth Chan-ocha, however, has tried to step back from a culture of subsidies across the agricultural sector. Last week, it sold half of the 200,000 tonnes of the state rubber stocks bought from farmers, to cut storage costs.

      Farmers are also blaming the government's sale of rubber stocks for the declines in prices and want the sale of remaining stocks to be frozen.

      Thailand produced 4.2 million tonnes of rubber in 2013, of which 3.7 million tonnes were exported.

      (1 US dollar = 32.1800 Thai baht) (Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman)

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      http://thailandchatter.com/showthrea...ll=1#post45112

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      • #4
        . . . and prices will rise . . . and they will fall . . . and they will rise . . .

        Farmers are happy enough to enjoy the good times and don't rep are for the difficult times.

        When the price is high they do daily tapping, double tapping etc..., cutting the economic lifetome of the tree.
        When prices are low they do the same thing to make up in quantity what they are 'losing' due to price.

        In any case they won't ever do better because they don't change their ages-old methods, cheat buyers by placing rocks into the cup lump etc etc etc

        . . . and then they get less for their trees when they reach 25 or so due to the mis-tapping.

        Idiotic cycle

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