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Vietnam vies with Thailand, Filipino rice importers
The Philippines
appears to have successfully exploited the stiff competition between two
large rice exporters, Vietnam
and Thailand,
to force the prices down.

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Philippine strategy
The Philippines said it will no longer import rice as domestic production is
high enough to satisfy domestic demand.
Some exporters think that if Vietnam
cannot sell rice to the country, the Vietnamese rice market would collapse.
However, analysts commented that it would be better for Vietnam not to sell rice to the Philippines
under the current mode.
In order to get the right to sell rice to the Philippines, exporters have to
travel there to attend bids opened by the Filipino National Food Authority
(NFA).
The exporters who win the bids must offer the lowest prices, and the prices
must not be higher than ceiling prices set by the authority.
Both Vietnam and Thailand offered prices higher than the ceiling price of
$340 per ton for 25 percent broken rice set by NFA in the June 5 bid, which
NFA opened to seek suppliers of 250,000 tons of rice.
Vietnam
got the right to supply 150,000 tons of rice later, after it agreed to lower
the selling price.
More recently, Vietnam
offered to supply 100,000 tons of rice at $416 per ton, but it still lost the
June 15 bid because the NFA’s ceiling price was much lower, at $408.14 per ton.
In late February, Vietnam
also won the right to provide 300,000 tons of white long grain rice to the Philippines under the G2G (government to
government) contract, after it agreed to slash the selling price to the same
level offered by Thailand.
Analysts said that once NFA sets the ceiling price, this means that the Philippines,
or the buyer, always has the right to set the prices.
Therefore, Vietnam and Thailand have to compete with each other to
win the contract under Philippines’
control.
For many years, the prices of 25 percent broken rice have been set at levels
hovering around $340 per ton, which is very close to the production cost.
However, in most cases, Vietnamese exporters decided to lower the selling
prices in order to win the contracts. They did not want to return to Vietnam
empty-handed.
Since the exporters could not sell rice at high prices, they tried to force
the prices down in the Vietnamese market. As a result, Vietnamese farmers
could not make reasonable profits.
According to the Vietnam Food Association (VFA), Vietnam had exported 2.1 million
tons of rice by the end of May, earning $870 million, a decrease of 10
percent in export volume and 13 percent price decrease in comparison with the
same period in 2014.
To date, Vietnam
has signed contracts on exporting 3.5 million tons of rice, or 8 percent
lower than the same period of last year.
TBKTSG
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