Thai White Rice 5%   :   570 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Thai White Rice 15%   :   550 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Thai White Rice 25%   :   520 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Thai White Rice 100%   :   445 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Vietnam White Rice 5%   :   560 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam White Rice 25%   :   540 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam White Rice 5451 5%   :   570 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam Fragrant Rice 5%   :   595 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam Fragrant Broken 100%   :   500 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Thai Fragrant Broken 100%   :   530 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Myanmar White Rice 5%   :   580 (FOB YANGON USD/MT)    |   Myanmar White Rice 25%   :   560 (FOB YANGON USD/MT)    |   Myanmar White Rice 100%   :   430 (FOB YANGON USD/MT)    |   India Long Grain White Rice 5%   :   600 (FOB MUNDHRA USD/MT)    |   India Medium Grain White Rice 5%   :   590 (FOB KOLKATA USD/MT)    |   Indian Brown Rice Swarna 5%   :   500 (FOB KOLKATA USD/MT)    |   Thai Parboiled Rice 5%   :   630 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Indian Long Grain Parboiled Rice 5%   :   540 (FOB KOLKATA USD/MT)    |   Indian Medium Grain Parboiled Rice 5%   :   525 (FOB KOLKATA USD/MT)    |   Vietnam Long Grain Parboiled Rice 5%   :   600 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Indian Basmati Rice 5% (1121 Pure)   :   1300 (FOB MUNDHRA USD/MT)    |   Thai Hommali Rice 5%   :   880 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Cambodia Phka Malis Rice 5%   :   820 (FOB SIHANOUKVILLE USD/MT)    |   Thai Glutinous Rice   :   750 (FOB BANGKOK USD/MT)    |   Vietnam Long AN Glutinous 10%   :   650 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam AN Giang Glutinous 10%   :   650 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Vietnam Japonica 5%   :   650 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Corn India SPOT   :   305 (FOB NHAVA SHEVA USD/MT)    |   Corn Pakistan SPOT   :   220 (FOB KARACHI USD/MT)    |   Robusta Coffee Vietnam   :   3800 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |   Black pepper Vietnam   :   4600 (FOB HCMC USD/MT)    |  

Traders see drop in rice prices next month

Jun 27, 2024

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    MANILA, Philippines — Rice prices may drop by as much as P9 per kilo this July, a local rice trading group assured the House leadership on Monday.

    During a meeting with Speaker Martin Romualdez, the leaders of the Philippine Rice Industry Stakeholders Movement (Prism)—composed of seed growers, farmers, millers, traders, importers, and retailers—estimated that rice prices would significantly drop to as low as P42 per kilo by July after President Ferdinand Marcos Jr. issued an executive order (EO) reducing tariff rates on imported rice.

    Rice tariff law amendments to keep rice affordable, accessible, says Romualdez

    Inquirer file photo

    Prism founder Orly Manuntag said the group also pledged to negotiate with exporting countries and convince them not to take advantage of rice prices “so that this EO would not be put to waste.”

    According to Manuntag, they expect the price of regular milled rice to go down to between P40 and P43 per kilo, well-milled rice to P45 to P46 per kilo, and premium rice to P47 to P50 per kilo.

    The President’s EO issued last month is part of the new Comprehensive Tariff Program for 2024-2028 approved by the National Economic and Development Authority Board, as the Marcos administration worked to reel in runaway rice prices and inflation. It reduces the tariff on imported rice from 35 percent to 15 percent in hopes of stabilizing rice prices.

     

    After the EO was enacted, agricultural groups like the Federation of Free Farmers (FFF) said the tariff cut was like a “stab in the back” and spelled the likely “death blow to the country’s 3 million rice farmers and the rice industry as a whole.”

    Shot in the dark

    “That the tariff [cut to 15 percent from 35 percent] on rice [imports] will provide major and lasting relief to consumers is more a shot in the dark than a probable result,” FFF national manager Raul Montemayor said.

    Manuntag admitted that the group initially thought the Marcos administration would release the EO in August, “but now we will simply have to adjust …, so right now we’re hoping that once the EO is reviewed, the administration can consider some of our recommendations.”

    This includes, among others, ensuring that farmers get enough subsidies as well as pushing for cluster farming, which would allow consumers to buy directly from farmers.

    At the same time, Romualdez sought to allay concerns that the measure did not meet earlier expectations to bring down rice prices to less than P30 by July—but admitted that it was possible that these could decrease further to P39 by next year.

    “I assure you that that’s the target, that’s the aspiration. We will get there somehow and we hope it will be sooner than later,” he added.

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