Companies and Markets
Market Research A to Z | Company Profiles A to Z | Register | Contact Us
+44 (0) 203 086 8600 Call us on

Brazil Agribusiness Report Q4 2009

330

Select License Type

Electronic License

Electronic License

An electronic version (mostly PDF, but can be Excel or PPT), which is either available for immediate download or will be sent via email by the Publisher of the report. The licencing for an electronic version is for use by the purchaser ONLY.

£330.00

Change Currency

GBP EURO USD

Market

Agriculture, Farming & Raw Materials

Report Type

Market Research

Country

Brazil

Published

25 September 2009

Number of Pages

73

Report Delivery

Download

Delivery Lead Time

Immediate

Publisher

Business Monitor International

Demand for Brazil's coffee is being supported by the disastrous harvest in neighbouring Colombia

Brazil's agricultural sector suffered from a combination of poor weather, a strong real and restricted credit through mid-2009. The drought in the south of the country will see production of grain and soybeans fall in 2009. We forecast soybean production to drop 5.6% year-on-year to 57.57mn tonnes while corn and wheat output will fall 14.1% and 3.8% to 50.36mn tonnes and 5.77mn tonnes, respectively.

While soybean prices have been supported by tight supplies owing to the devastation of the crop in neighbouring Argentina, the low world corn price combined with poor yields and the strong real has put pressure on farmers' profits. The government has stepped in by raising minimum prices for the crop.

Despite this, we expect to see the area planted to corn decline in 2010 as farmers switch to soybeans. We still forecast corn production to increase next year, however, owing to an expected increase in the average yield.

While drought has caused crop losses for grain crops, the sugar cane and coffee harvests were hurt by unseasonally heavy rains through the southern winter months of 2009. The rains have delayed harvesting of both crops and could see average yields decline. It is quality that is likely to suffer more, however.

Sucrose recovery levels are down and the quality of Brazil's coffee crop will also fall. Demand for Brazil's coffee is being supported by the disastrous harvest in neighbouring Colombia where production has been hit by rains and replanting of coffee production.

Tight world supplies have also boosted demand for Brazilian sugar. Millers have been maximising sugar production at the expense of ethanol to take advantage of the surge in the price for sugar this year. This will see the trend for the declining proportion of cane used for sugar reversed; with investment in recent years focused on increasing ethanol production, mills are now working at full capacity for sugar production. The high level of indebtedness in the sector is making funds for investing in capacity improvements hard to come by despite the high sugar price.

The government is working to open up credit to farmers. In July the agriculture minister said the government would increase the amount of government-backed credit available to farmers by 38% to BRL108bn, according to Bloomberg. This should go some way to making up for the fall in financing from agricultural trading companies and private banks. Difficulty in accessing credit has slowed expansion of agricultural production in Brazil over the years. As Brazil's economy grows and labour costs rise, the pressure to invest in mechanisation will increase. Already producers of key export crops such as coffee are struggling to find labour at affordable levels. Good access to credit will be essential for the continuing development of the sector.

Speak to an Advisor

Call us on
+44 (0) 203 086 8600

Select License Type

Electronic License

Electronic License

An electronic version (mostly PDF, but can be Excel or PPT), which is either available for immediate download or will be sent via email by the Publisher of the report. The licencing for an electronic version is for use by the purchaser ONLY.

£330.00

Change Currency

GBP EURO USD

Change Currency

GBP
USD

Become an Affiliate

Do you manage an industry specific website or blog? Are you looking to monetise your web traffic further? Are you a B2B website?

Why not offer your visitors industry specific strategic market reports and company profiles? Our Affiliate Program enables you to provide quality content on your website and to earn money from passing on visitors to our website. If a sale is made from your visitor, you earn commission (a fixed percentage of the price of a product).

Custom Research

Cannot find what you need? We can tailor a report for you. Complete the Custom Research Form and we will provide a quote.

AVAMAE Website design and development by
Accessibility
Close

Contrast settings

Text size settings