{"id":123961,"date":"2021-05-06T08:35:12","date_gmt":"2021-05-06T08:35:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/?p=123961"},"modified":"2021-05-06T08:35:12","modified_gmt":"2021-05-06T08:35:12","slug":"update-1-world-food-price-index-climbs-in-april-highest-since-mid-2014-fao","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/precoinnews.com\/markets\/update-1-world-food-price-index-climbs-in-april-highest-since-mid-2014-fao\/","title":{"rendered":"UPDATE 1-World food price index climbs in April, highest since mid-2014 -FAO"},"content":{"rendered":"
(Adds details)<\/p>\n
ROME, May 6 (Reuters) – World food prices increased for a 11th consecutive month in April, hitting their highest level since May 2014, with sugar leading a rise in all the main indices, the United Nations food agency said on Thursday.<\/p>\n
The Food and Agriculture Organization\u2019s food price index, which measures monthly changes for a basket of cereals, oilseeds, dairy products, meat and sugar, averaged 120.9 points last month versus a revised 118.9 in March.<\/p>\n
The March figure was previously given as 118.5.<\/p>\n
The Rome-based FAO also said in a statement that new forecasts pointed to growth in both world wheat and maize output in the coming season.<\/p>\n
FAO\u2019s cereal price index rose 1.2% in April month-on-month and 26% year-on-year. Worries about crop conditions in Argentina, Brazil and the United States pushed maize prices up 5.7% last month, while wheat prices held largely steady. By contrast, international rice prices slipped, FAO said.<\/p>\n
FAO\u2019s vegetable oil price index rose 1.8% on the month, pushed higher by rising soy, rapeseed and palm oil quotations, which offset lower sunflower oil values.<\/p>\n
Dairy prices rose 1.2%, with butter, skim milk powder and cheese all lifted by good demand from Asia, while the meat index climbed 1.7%. FAO said both bovine and ovine meat quotations rose, supported by \u201csolid demand\u201d from East Asia.<\/p>\n
After a sharp drop in March, sugar prices rebounded in April, posting a 3.9% increase on the month and an almost 60% surge on the year. The monthly increase was prompted by strong buying amid concerns over tighter supplies in 2020\/21, due to a slow harvest in Brazil and frost damage in France, FAO said.<\/p>\n
FAO raised its forecast for global cereal production in 2020 by 1.7 million tonnes to 2.767 billion tonnes, 2.1% up on 2019 levels.<\/p>\n
The U.N. agency also provided its first outlook for wheat in the 2021\/22 season, forecasting production at 778.8 million tonnes, up 0.5% on the 2020 estimate, lifted by an anticipated 6% increase in output in the European Union.<\/p>\n
FAO also said that early prospects for global coarse grains production in 2021 pointed to a likely third consecutive year of growth, mostly related to maize.<\/p>\n
It said the forecast was driven by expectations of increased planted areas in Brazil, China, Ukraine and the United States, as well as recovering yields in the EU.<\/p>\n