Dec 17, 2007 8:33 pm US/Eastern
Wheat Prices Soar, Grocery Bills Follow
Strong Wheat Demand Depletes U.S. Supply; Food Prices Rise At 4.1 Percent Annual Rate
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Wheat supplies in the U.S. have dwindled this year as one wheat crop after another around the world has been damaged by poor weather, most recently in Australia and Argentina. (File)
CBS 3
Wheat prices surged above $10 a bushel for the first time ever Monday
amid concerns that strong demand globally could result in a grain
shortage in the United States next year - worsening food price
inflation.
Other commodities markets mostly declined, with energy, other agricultural futures and metals moving lower.
Wheat supplies in the U.S. have dwindled this year as one wheat
crop after another around the world has been damaged by poor weather,
most recently in Australia and Argentina. That's sent buyers scrambling
for stockpiles at any cost. U.S. wheat exporters already have sold more
than 90 percent of the 1.175 billion bushels the U.S. Department of
Agriculture expects will be exported during the whole marketing year,
which ends in June 2008.
Wheat prices crossing the $10 a bushel threshold won't immediately
translate into a spike in retail prices for bread, cereal, cookies and
other products, experts say. That due partly because companies like
Kellogg Co., General Mills Inc., ConAgra Foods Inc. and Kraft Foods
Inc. typically protect themselves from price volatility with long-term
supply contracts. But analysts say consumers should expect that higher
wheat prices will eventually work their way into the grocery aisle.
A bushel of wheat for March delivery surged to a record $10.095 on
the Chicago Board of Trade early in the day before shedding 13.5 cents
to settle at $9.66 a bushel as profit-taking set in. Wheat prices have
hit a record high each of the past three trading sessions and have
doubled since the start of the year, when wheat traded for about $5 a
bushel.
Food prices rose at a 4.1 percent annual rate in the three months
ended in November largely due to higher milk, egg and meat prices,
according to the Labor Department's latest index of consumer prices.
Wheat, corn and soybeans are used to feed livestock; as those costs go
up, so does the retail cost to consumers.
White bread is up 10 cents to $1.24; cheddar cheese is up 48 cents to $4.47 a pound; and eggs are up 51 cents a dozen, reports
CBS News correspondent Cynthia Bowers.
But it is the price of milk that is really getting hard to swallow - up
90 cents over this time last year to almost $4 a gallon.
The worldwide wheat shortage has contributed to the inflation, but
so has a host of other factors, said Darrel Good, agricultural
economist with the University of Illinois. Biofuels production has
pushed up corn and soybean prices. Meanwhile, the price of vegetable
oils used in packaged foods and biodiesel has followed the price of
crude oil sharply higher.
"It's a combination of all of the above factors, which are coming together at this point," Good said.
Unprecedented demand for agricultural products from fast-growing
countries including China and India has exacerbated the supply crunch.
In the market panics of previous years, prices would rise to a level
that developing countries couldn't afford. But it's not clear where
that peak level lies now, said Mark Schultz, chief analyst with
Northstar Commodity.
"Globally, other economies are much stronger. China is up
significantly, India is up significantly, and Russia's economy is much
stronger," he said. "So when we used to run wheat prices up high, years
ago, they didn't have the money and they didn't buy much of the
product. Now prices run up and they're still buying."
March corn added 0.5 cent to $4.3875 a bushel, and January soybeans
fell 0.25 cent to $11.5675 a bushel on the CBOT. Both corn and soybeans
have recently touched record highs.
Elsewhere, other commodities prices fell as the dollar rose against
major world currencies. A stronger dollar can make commodities appear
more expensive to buyers abroad.
Oil prices fell after an official of the Organization for Petroleum
Exporting Countries indicated the group could boost production, easing
concerns about tight supplies.
"I would not exclude the possibility of increasing production if
the market wants it," said Chakib Khelil, Algeria's oil minister, who
becomes OPEC president on Jan. 1.
Light, sweet crude for January dropped 64 cents to close at $90.63 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Gasoline futures shed 0.63 cent to settle at $2.3354 a gallon,
while heating oil futures lost 1 cent to settle at $2.5979 a gallon on
the Nymex.
Precious metals ended in a mixed range, after fluctuating between
losses and gains. February gold edged up $1.30 to settle at $799.30 an
ounce, while March silver fell 0.3 cent to close at $13.98 an ounce.
A euro bought $1.439, down from $1.4425 late Friday, as the dollar strengthened.
Industrial metals mostly moved lower on the London Metal Exchange,
with copper and zinc showing the steepest declines. Nickel prices edged
higher.
Copper for March delivery fell 6.75 cents to $2.889 a pound on the Nymex.