Bangladesh wheat import tender lowest offer $256.38/T.

Bangladesh to import 50,000 tonnes of wheat drew its lowest offer from Singapore-based Agrocorp at $256.38 a tonne. Two other trading houses competed for the tender from Bangladesh’s Directorate General of Food, quoting deliveries at $258.95 a tonne and $262.89 a tonne. The price includes shipping, insurance and discharge costs. Bangladesh emerged as a major buyer of rice and wheat in 2017 after floods destroyed its crops, sending rice prices to record highs and prompted many people to switch to flour. Bangladesh has turned to the Black Sea region for wheat as supply from India dwindled to meet growing demand while the country’s output has stagnated at around 1 million tonnes.

Kansas winter wheat harvest was 71% completed.

Kansas winter wheat harvest was 71% completed by July 1 compared with 52% a week earlier and 63% as the 2013-17 average for the date. Harvest in adjacent states was 98% completed in Oklahoma (90% as the average for the date), 80% in Texas (83%), 7% in Nebraska (9%) and 21% in Colorado (9%).

Japan offers to buy 79,770 tonnes of food wheat via tender.

Japan’s Ministry of Agriculture is seeking to buy 79,770 tonnes of food-quality wheat from the United States and Australia in a regular tender. it has suspended its tender and sale of wheat from Canada after grain containing a genetically modified trait was discovered last summer in Canada’s Alberta province.

Japan to import 65,390 tonnes feed wheat and barley via tender.

Japan will import 27,210 tonnes of feed-quality wheat and 38,180 tonnes of barley for livestock use, via a simultaneous buy and sell (SBS) auction. The ministry had sought 120,000 tonnes of feed wheat and 200,000 tonnes of feed barley to be loaded by Oct. 31 and arrive in Japan by Dec. 28 in the tender that is usually conducted weekly. It is seeking the same amount for each grain to be loaded and shipped during the same period in a similar tender that will be held on July 11.

India Govt hiked 200 rs/Qtl the paddy MSP.

The government hiked the minimum support price (MSP) or purchase price for paddy crops up to Rs. 200 per quintal as it looked to fulfill its poll promise to give farmers 50 per cent more rate than their cost of production. The announcement of higher MSP coupled with the forecast of normal monsoon this year, could further boost foodgrains output. The MSP of paddy (common grade) has been increased by Rs. 200 to Rs. 1,750 per quintal, while that of Grade A variety by Rs. 180 per quintal to Rs. 1,770.

US Cash Soymeal-Basis mostly unchanged on robust demand.

Soymeal spot basis offers were largely unchanged at US domestic and export markets as demand remained robust and soy crush margins hovered near the highest levels ever. The recent decline in Chicago Board of Trade soymeal futures enticed domestic livestock and poultry producers to buy train and truckloads of the animal feed. CBOT August soymeal touched a low of $328.20 per ton, the lowest since the roughly five-month low on June 19. Comparatively larger declines in prices for soybeans boosted profit margins for soybean processors. Crush margins on the CBOT of nearly $1.93 per bushel per bushel of soybeans. That is the highest nice record-large crush margins in 2014, suggesting processors could turn big profits. One cash dealer pegged profit margins on each ton of soymeal at about $50.

China expected to cancel 1.1 million tonnes of soybeans from the US as new tariff bites.

Chinese companies are expected to cancel most of the remaining soybeans they have committed to buy from the United States in the year ending August 31 once the extra tariff on US imports takes effect. China has yet to take delivery of more than 1.1 million tonnes booked for the current marketing year, last week that China had resold about 123,000 tonnes of committed deliveries to Bangladesh and Iran.

India Govt hiked the soybean MSP.

The government hiked the minimum support price (MSP) or purchase price for soybean crops up to Rs. 349 per quintal as it looked to fulfill its poll promise to give farmers 50 per cent more rate than their cost of production. The announcement of higher MSP coupled with the forecast of normal monsoon this year, could further boost foodgrains output. The MSP of soybean has been increased by Rs. 349 to Rs. 3,399 per quintal.

Pakistan’s rice export hits 2-bln-USD mark.

Pakistan has exported rice worth around 2 billion U.S. dollars during the last fiscal year (FY), June 2017-July 2018. The country’s rice export hit the 2-billion-U.S.-dollar mark for the first time since the FY2014-15 as it achieved the target of 4 million tonnes of the crop yield this year. Average per-tonne export price of rice in the last fiscal year also rose to around 1,040 U.S. dollars, from below 950 U.S. dollars in fiscal year 2016-17. Rise in international prices of rice coupled with a higher demand of Pakistani rice and local rice exporters investment on processing and packaging of rice also contributed to the achievement.