Promoting India Latin America Collaboration

India’s Vegetable oil imports – including soy oil from Brazil/Argentina, exceed over 1 million tonnes in August


Financial Express

According to the latest data from the Solvent Extractors’ Association of India (SEAI), import of 1.06 million tonne of vegetable in August 2010 mainly consisting of edible oil is the highest in a single month since the government allowed import of crude vegetable oil for meeting the domestic demand in 1994. In India, edible oil demand usually jumps ahead of festivals and marriage as consumption of fried eatables rises.

SEA said India’s imports in August [2010] were an increase of 64% compared to same month last year, 2009. About 1.3 lakh tonne of RBD palmolein, 5.4 lakh tonne of crude palm oil and 2.1 lakh tonne of soyabean oil were imported during the month. SEA said around 6.8 lakh tonne of edible oil stock was at ports and about 7 lakh tonne were in the pipeline at the start of this month. In August, 2009, edible oil imports stood at 6.12 lakh tonne, while non-edible oil shipments amounted to 37,705 tonne, the industry body said.

India imports palm oils from Indonesia and Malaysia, while soyaoil and sunflower oil are sourced from Argentina and Brazil. India, the second-biggest vegetable oil consumer after China, had imported a record 8.6 million tonne of vegetable oil in the 2008-09 oil year.

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Brazil on the Rise

Here at IndusLatin we recently highlighted the growing role of cities like Mumbai, India, and São Paulo, Brazil, as international financial centers. The NY Times has just drew attention to a few recent developments in Brazil that indicate that this trend is unlikely to stop any time soon. Here are some key facts from the article:

  • A Brazilian-backed investment firm just acquired Burger King, further securing Brazil’s place as an ascendent global commercial leader
  • The number of millionaires in Brazil jumped nearly 70 percent, to 220,000, from 130,000, between 2006 and 2008
  • JBS Friboi, a Brazilian company, butchers and packages 8 percent of the world’s beef

The article further emphasizes that Brazil is an increasingly dominant world player in the food and agriculture industries, and with growing fears over the world’s food supply, Brazilian agriculture is looking like a solid investment.

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India signs agriculture pact with Argentina

Last month, I filmed the farm equipment pavilion – see below, at the La Rural agro fair in Buenos Aires. The scale, size and variety of the locally-developed machines attests to the high-tech nature of farming in Argentina, and neighboring Uruguay, Paraguay and Brazil.

Farm Equipment on Display at the Argentina La Rural Trade Fair

Yahoo! India News

India has signed an agreement with Argentina on conducting research in agriculture and other allied sectors, in line with its plans to tap natural and other resources in South America to boost its food security.

Agriculture Minister Sharad Pawar signed a memorandum of understanding on cooperation in agriculture and allied sectors with his Argentine counterpart Julian Andres Dominguez here this weekend.Pawar is on a two-week long visit to Argentina, Brazil and Mexico to study the best practices in agriculture in these countries.

The South American countries have overtaken the US in soya production, accounting for 50 percent of global production. India this April replaced China as the biggest importer of Argentine soybean oil. Argentina is the world’s largest exporter of sunflower and soybean oil; world’s second largest exporter of corn; and world’s third largest producer soybeans.

‘The memorandum of understanding provides a framework for exchange of information on best practices and technologies, cooperation in research and development and promotion of trade, investment and joint ventures,’ said an official release. India is looking to replicate the success of Argentina in turning agriculture into a high-technology sector.

The Indian delegation led by Pawar will also explore the possibility of increasing the supply of edible oil and pulses to the subcontinent as domestic output has not been able to meet galloping demand.

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The food crisis – climate change could reduce India’s food crop by as much as 30% in the next 25 years

Global Warming and Agriculture (www.cgdev.org)
 UPI.com

Welcome to the future. The combination of population growth, richer diets and the erosion of arable land means that there will be pressure on food supplies for decades to come.

Wheat prices touched $300 a ton last month, almost double their price in April. Beef prices in the United States are back to their 2008 peak of 90 cents a pound, after a bumpy but steady rise from 60 cents a decade ago. Prices for lamb have tripled in the course of this decade.

But there are two wild cards lurking in the future that could turn crisis into catastrophe. The first is climate change. It matters not whether one assumes this is caused by human action or is simply one of those centuries-long trends of warming and cooling that has marked the Earth’s history. Temperatures are rising, weather and rainfall patterns are shifting and these changes will have major impact on crops and yields.

The most serious study yet produced on the likely impact of climate change on food, by William Cline of the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington, claims that the most serious change could come in India.

His model suggests that the overall food crop in India could fall by as much as 30 percent over the next 25 years. Since India’s population is expected to grow from 1.1 billion to 1.5 billion over the same period, this spells disaster.

The second wild card is a form of wheat rust called Ug99, so named because it first emerged in Uganda in 1999. At first it was thought to have been controlled within a limited area but it seems to be spreading inexorably. First it hit crops in Kenya, then Ethiopia. Then it jumped across the Red Sea to Yemen and has now been found in Iran. This year it was found in South Africa.

Worse still, it isn’t a single fungus. It has developed four variants so far, which means it can overcome most of the cocktails of wheat breeds that scientists have developed over recent decades.

The fear is that the virus spreads from Iran eastward into the Punjab, the breadbasket of the Indian subcontinent, with dire implications for India and Pakistan. Or it could move north into the Caucasus and central Asia and then attack Russia and the Ukraine and Europe.
Read the rest of this entry »

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Why Investors Are Planting Their Assets in Agriculture in Latin America

The long-term fundamentals looks rather promising for agribusiness, along with related agriculture ETFs that tracks the sector. The human population is still expanding and demand for high-protein sustenance is increasing from a growing middle class in the emerging markets.

Food security remains a major issue, writes Richard Barely for The Wall Street Journal. Prices for basic crops spiked before the financial crisis, which triggered riots in some countries, and millions around the world are still undernourished.

If countries like China and other developing countries switch to more meat consumption, grain production would have to keep up to feed livestock and better technology would have to be implemented to boost crop yield. Additionally, biofuel production will reduce the land available for food crops.

Corn futures rallied as hot weather persisted in the corn belt, pushing past $4 a bushel for December deliveries, reports Ian Berry for The Wall Street Journal. Wheat futures prices jumped more than 6% on concerns about the how the weather may affect crops in Europe and Russia.

via Seeking Alpha

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Agriculture is one of the great places to be – Jim Rogers on Bloomberg UTV in India

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Jim speaking at an event – “Investment strategies in an emerging financial lanscape”. Funny to see the Indian interviewer’s (probably an MBA!) WTF reaction to Jim’s comments on agriculture. In trying to sell the attractiveness of the farming business in South America to potential investors, I’ve found the going rough in India. People cannot imagine farming as a lucractive proposition, like it is in South America. No Indian middle class family would want their kids to get into farming. Heck, even Indian farmers – almost half of whom want to quit farming, don’t want their kids to be farmers! Farming and agribusiness gets a bum rap in India, because it is a disastrous business there – afflicted with a nexus of misdirected subsidies, price support, import and export controls, collapse of extension services, absence of an agricultural land market and pervasive corrupt bureaucratic intervention across the entire range of the rural economy, as Dr. Rajiv Kumar of ICRIER so eloquently states.

One of the CEOs of an Indian agrochemical company shared a story with me last month. One of his employees approached him asking for his help in finding a job for the employee’s 25 year old nephew back in the village. When the CEO asked what the son was doing, the employee replied “Nothing” The CEO said “How can he be doing nothing, he is 25 years old?” The employee replied, “He is dabbling in farming, that is like doing nothing!”

YouTube – Jim Rogers on Bloomberg UTV.

Agriculture in my view, is one of the best places to be in the next 30 Years , I mean all these people getting MBAs are making terrible mistakes as far as I’m concerned , they should be getting farming degrees.

Agriculture has been a disaster for 30 years…Agricultural products are gonna be the best investments over the next several years. I think farming…agriculture is gonna be one of the best industries in the world. Like I said, all people who got MBAs made a mistake, they should have been getting agriculture degree.

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Buy Farmland and Soft Commodities like sugar, cotton:How to Invest Like Jim Rogers

Jim Rogers again talking about how depressed agriculture commodities are relatively to others which have boomed recently and that is where investors should look. (Sugar is still off 70% of its all-time high reached in 1974, Wheat – he doesn’t mention it, is at 200 yr lows, in inflation-adjusted terms.)

TheStreet.com

Jim Rogers, legendary contrarian investor, author and chairman of Rogers Holdings, is still betting on $2,000 gold in 10 years and in the meantime is looking to profit from China, the euro and other commodities.
Aside from the precious metals that we talked about, what other commodities do you like?

Rogers: Agriculture still. Agriculture’s still very depressed. Frequently, one will make a lot of money if you buy the things that are depressed [and] where things might be getting better.

So what happens to the world economy as you see it?

Rogers : We’re certainly going to have another recession in the next two or three years. We’ve had recessions every four to six years since the beginning of time. So by 2012, we’re getting ready to have another one, if history’s any guide. I suspect it will happen before then, because there are still so many imbalances in the world which have to be sorted out.

What’s the biggest positive and the biggest negative that you see in the big macro picture right now for the world economy?

Rogers: The gigantic debt imbalances. Throughout history, when you’ve had these kind of imbalances, they usually worked their way out in the currency market. It used to be the gold market when we had the gold standard. We’ve been seeing currency dislocations for two or three years. We’re [going to] see a lot more. Everybody who gets involved with you should learn about currency because we’re [going to] see many, many, many, more currency problems in the next two or three years. And that’s [going to] affect us all, including stock markets and including economies.

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India’s water shortage for agriculture

I visited Punjab and talked to some farmers there in Feb ’2010, and they told me within 10 years groundwater in most places will be below a 100 feet, and pumps will stop working. Within 20 years, they are looking at a desert like situation in India’s bread basket.

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via Fortune

As the water table drops dangerously low, [Punjabi] farmers are investing heavily – and often going into debt – to bore deeper wells and install more powerful pumps. A prayer might just be the best chance for survival.

Punjab has only 1.5 percent of India’s land, but its output of rice and wheat accounts for 50 percent of the grain the government purchases to feed more than 400 million poor Indians. Experts say the 375-foot-deep tube well and 7.5-horsepower pump Kumar is installing for a farmer are at the eye of a storm that threatens India’s food security, environmental health, and economic progress. “We have depleted the ground water to such an extent that it is devastating the country,” says Gurdev Hira, an expert on soil and water at Punjab Agriculture University in Ludhiana. Hira estimates that the energy used to subsidize rice production in the region costs $381 million a year. He and other experts warn that, if left unchecked, future drilling will bleed state budgets, parch aquifers, and run farmers out of business.

The problem is not only that farmers are mining aquifers faster than they can be replenished. As water levels drop, pumps are also sapping an already fragile and overtaxed electricity grid. And because farmers in Punjab pay nothing for electricity, they run their pumps with abandon, which further depletes the water table.
India’s power sector loses as much as $9 billion a year subsidizing farmers’ use of electric pumps. That’s half of what the country spends on health and twice what it spends on education. Says Shreekant Gupta, a professor of economics at Delhi University: “It’s a classic example of bad economic policies having serious environmental consequences.”

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India’s Interest in Latin America/South America must go beyond World Cup: Not just football superpowers, agriculture superpowers as well

Note: an abbreviated version of this article titled “India’s Interest in Latin America must go beyond World Cup” was syndicated by Indo-Asian News Wire Service. A few portals that ran the article include: SIFY, TradeIndia, IndiaNewsPost, ThaIndian, SouthAsiaMail, ProKerala, Gulf Times, Qatar and the Ministry of Overseas Indian Affairs.

Over the next few weeks, millions of Indians, like their compatriots around the world, will be glued to the television, cheering for their favorite World Cup teams. Among the South American teams are traditional favorites, Brazil and Argentina. But other teams from the region include Uruguay, Paraguay and Chile. All these countries are football superpowers, with a long history of producing players who dazzle with their stylish play: eyes-in-the-back-of-the-head passing, bicycle kicks, dancing and dribbling past three or more defenders before scoring. The names of Messi, Kaká, Tévez and Forlán will echo off fans’ lips well after the finals.

In India, meanwhile, fever for those South American fútbol stars tends to fade once the games are over. Yet there is an important reason why enthusiasm for South America should persist beyond the World Cup: The Mercosur trade bloc of countries – Brazil, Argentina, Uruguay and Paraguay are the world’s emerging agriculture superpowers. They are already shipping their tremendous surpluses worldwide and, as agriculture outsourcing hubs, have the potential to meet India’s food needs in the coming decades.

South American surpluses, especially in oilseeds, pulses and sugar, will feed the growing food deficits in much of Asia, with shrinking arable land and expanding populations.

First some geographical context, since South America – unlike Canada and the United States – generally doesn’t appear on the Indian radar. Brazil is three times the size of India. It is even larger than the continental United States. Yet its population is about that of Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand. Argentina is nearly the size of India, with a population equivalent to New Delhi, Mumbai and Kolkata. Uruguay, sandwiched between Brazil and Argentina, is about the size of either Karnataka or Gujarat, three and a half times the size of Punjab, yet it holds less than half the population of Bangalore or Ahmedabad.

Flying from India to cities like Buenos Aires, Montevideo or Sao Paulo, located in the South Atlantic seaboard, is quicker than getting to California. All these Mercosur countries lie in the tropical and temperate latitudes where a wide range of crops can be grown, outside the zones of hurricanes, earthquakes or volcanoes.
What makes the agribusiness fundamentals so great in these countries?

  1. Farmland is abundant, and scale farming on parcel sizes of more than 1000 hectares the norm. Many farms are 4000 hectares and larger. The soil quality is extremely good. Soybean yields, for example, are 3 to 4 tons per hectare; corn yields range from 5 to 12 tons per hectare; and rice yields total more than 7 tons per hectare.
  2. While crop yields are at least two to three times greater than those in India, the cost of farmland is only a fraction of Indian prices. Most farmland comes with clean property titles.
  3. Agribusiness is well developed, analogous to the IT sector in India. A large pool of qualified agronomists – experts in soil science and management – conducts ongoing research in the most effective and efficient farm practices. Argentina introduced the technology of direct-seeding, which improves soil and moisture conservation, and which other nations now use. Harvard has selected leading South American agribusiness models as case studies in its own research.
  4. The Mercosur countries use the same or similar cutting-edge farm machinery and technology – the “no-till drill,” for example – found in the United States, Europe and Australia. A network of service providers assists with planting, harvesting and other aspects of the farming process. Logistics and supporting transport infrastructure are well developed.
  5. Agribusiness remains in private-sector hands; governments provide no farm subsidies. In some instances, the government taxes agriculture revenue; yet farming remains a profitable activity. So there is an ongoing imperative for innovation and efficiency to sustain the profitability.
  6. All the Mercosur countries have abundant fresh water, with networks of streams, lakes and perennial rivers. Rainfall occurs predictably throughout the year, which means there is little, if any, necessity for groundwater pumps.
  7. South America has 26 percent of the world’s freshwater and just 5 percent of the world’s population. Population growth rates are below replacement rates, so over the next 40 years, there will be little demographic pressure on water resources.

With these advantages, the Mercosur countries enjoy large agriculture export surpluses and ship 60 to 90 percent of their annual production to such countries as China, Vietnam, Korea and Japan. India imports their grains, edible oils and sugar.
On the socioeconomic front, Mercosur countries are democracies, with relatively little ethnic, religious or racial conflict. Cultural values, such as emphasis on family and relationships, resemble those in India. Indians will find a good business fit while operating in these countries. The Mercosur governments are dedicated to attracting responsible foreign investment and industry.

In South America, various combinations of buy/lease farming options are available, and annual financial returns can exceed 20 percent or more. In addition, farm portfolio managers in South America (akin to financial portfolio managers) can manage an agriculture operation for a fixed fee per hectare, plus a share of the profits. This would suit those Indian investors who know nothing about farming but do care about output and returns, and don’t want to deal with purchasing equipment or hiring personnel. Indian agrochemical companies like United Phosphorus and Excel Crop Care, and farm equipment players like Mahindra are reaping rewards from the South American agriculture market.

It is a fact that India’s domestic production cannot keep pace with the growing demands for more and better-quality food. It is time that Indian companies and investors look at South America for “backward integration” into farming operations. To use a World Cup analogy, it’s time to score goals for India’s food needs.

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Cash Crops: Buying Farmland for Income in South America

Investors nervous about the stock market and in search of better returns than a money-market fund might consider plowing cash into farmland, say some financial planners.

Wheat farm in Uruguay

The Article talks about the prospects for US farmland, but South American farmland is worth a look by US HNW investors. An acquisition of farmland parcels of, say 1000 hectares, in the grain belt of South America is available at a fraction of prices in the U.S. Midwest. Grain farming here, unlike in the U.S., receives zero government subsidies, yet is quite profitable. The farming market is completely dollarized, both purchases and receivables, alleviating currency risk. Besides, generating 5% or so in annual income, the potential annual land appreciation is a few percentage points higher than U.S. comparables. There are farm management companies that structure and manage operations for a fixed fee - plus a share of the profits. Ideal even for investors, with a non-farming background, who are interested in yields and profits. Local bank financing is also available.

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