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Business News/ Industry / Traders squeezed as farmers gamble stockpile
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Traders squeezed as farmers gamble stockpile

Farmers stop selling crops immediately after harvesting and wait for prices to rise when supplies dwindle

The number of farmers moving away from the traditional supply cycle is rising every year, forcing traders and exporters to adjust. Photo: Mint Premium
The number of farmers moving away from the traditional supply cycle is rising every year, forcing traders and exporters to adjust. Photo: Mint

Piwdai: Farmers such as 68-year-old Ghanshyam Gokale are quietly shaking up agricultural commodity trading in India, forcing the likes of top soybean processor Ruchi Soya Industries Ltd to shift its business model away from futures contracts and towards the “spot" market.

Gokale, and other prosperous growers like him, has stopped selling his crops immediately after harvesting. Instead, he has converted his old house into two warehouses, where he stores his produce and waits for prices to rise when supplies dwindle.

Rising wealth due to a rally in agricultural crop prices, a jump in farm loan disbursement at more favourable interest rates and larger houses with space for storage are giving millions of farmers the freedom to decide when to sell their harvest.

That is disrupting seasonal supply patterns and squeezing processors and exporters, who have been left unsure whether they will get enough supplies on time to fulfil their contracted obligations.

“Money gives you the power to hold crops," said Gokale, who kept back his entire harvest of 350 quintals of soybeans from 30 hectares. “Farmers are getting higher prices. They are becoming rich."

Soybean, rubber, rice and sugar cane prices have more than doubled in five years, while wheat and corn prices have surged more than 60%, boosting earnings of farmers.

“Usually small farmers rush to sell their crops in the first three-four months after harvesting and prices fall," said Gokale, who plans to build a cold storage for potatoes at his farm in Piwdai village, near Indore, 600 km north-east of Mumbai.

“I started selling crops after six months. By that time supplies fall and I garner higher prices."

Supply cycle disrupted

The number of farmers moving away from the traditional supply cycle is rising every year, forcing traders and exporters to adjust.

“We have changed our business model with more spot month basis soymeal sales than longer term," Nitesh Shahra, president of the refinery division at Ruchi Soya, told Reuters. “It is a step back from what is happening in the world, but we have to live with the situation."

Spot sales are conducted for immediate settlement, whereas futures contracts involve selling goods for delivery some months ahead.

The shift does bring some advantages for Ruchi Soya, which crushes soybeans bought from farmers to produce oil and meal that it mainly exports.

“Since now it is more spot-to-spot trade, you don’t need to keep inventory. So cost of inventory and risk of carrying inventory will go down ... hedging requirement is also going down," Shahra said.

In August and September oil mills aggressively struck deals to export soymeal as soybean prices were around 3,400 per 100 kg, and were expected to fall with new season supply starting from October.

But when the mills started to execute exports orders, soybean prices jumped above 3,900 as farmers held back supplies.

“Just to fulfil soymeal export obligations some oil mills bought soybean at a higher price, but they incurred losses from the deals," said Rajesh Agrawal, coordinator of the Soybean Processors Association of India (SOPA).

Nasty surprise

India’s imports and exports of farm goods have become more volatile as a result of the shifting supply patterns.

Soybean supplies in the first half of the 2012-13 marketing year ended on 30 September fell 7% from a year ago in top producing Madhya Pradesh, while in the second half they jumped 85 percent. Consequently India’s soymeal exports in the first quarter of the year fell nearly 27% from a year ago, but in the last quarter of the year jumped 157%.

India’s natural rubber imports in the September quarter more than doubled from a year ago due to a domestic supply crunch.

“You don’t know when you will get nasty surprise," said an official at the Automotive Tyre Manufacturers Association. “In July tyre companies were not getting enough rubber despite paying a nearly 10% premium over global prices. They were forced to increase rubber imports."

In September and October, farmers’ holding back of supplies of onions, a staple of many Indian dishes, forced the government to organise emergency supplies from China and Iran to calm record prices ahead of elections in five states.

With the exception of highly perishable commodities such as some vegetables, farmers have started holding back almost every crop, from pulses to cotton to rubber, says Nitin Kalantri, a pulses miller based at Latur in Maharashtra. As a result, he struggles to operate his mills at full capacity.

Institutional credit

Jagdish Rawalia, another prosperous farmer from neighbouring Sanawadia village, said there was less risk in delaying sales now that farmers mostly borrow from banks that charge around 4% interest per year.

“Just five years back the interest rate was 16%," said Rawalia. “Moneylenders were charging much more than that. Then there was more risk and less incentive in holding back supplies."

Farmers usually borrow ahead of sowing to buy seeds and fertiliser. Private money lenders had been charging interest as high as 30% per year from farmers in the absence of institutional credit. So after harvesting farmers were quickly selling their crops to repay the loans.

In 2008 the government waived agriculture debt of millions of farmers who had defaulted, reopening access to bank loans for many such farmers in a populist move that, along with an interest subvention scheme, made new credit cheaper.

“More and more farmers will borrow from institutions like banks and co-operative societies in coming years as the banking network is expanding in rural areas," said a senior official at National Bank for Agriculture and Rural Development.

The government expects agriculture lending to rise to more than 7 trillion in the 2013-14 financial year ending on 31 March, compared with 2.5 trillion in 2007-08.

Farmers are using profits to build spacious new houses, where some portion can be used for storing crops.

“Many farmers don’t need to spend money to store crops in warehouses. They keep it in houses," says Agrawal of SOPA.

And this is just beginning. Industry officials believe the traditional supply pattern will change further as smaller farmers have started following their more prosperous peers.

“This trend is going to continue ... for farmers now it has become a rule-of-thumb that prices will rise in the lean supply season," says Shahra at Ruchi Soya. Reuters

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Published: 31 Dec 2013, 02:29 PM IST
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