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Soaring soyabean price stirs anger among poor(enviros: the enemy of the masses)
FT ^ | 01/18/08 | Raphael Minder, John Aglionby, and Jung-a Song

Posted on 01/17/2008 11:35:09 PM PST by TigerLikesRooster

Soaring soyabean price stirs anger among poor

By Raphael Minder in Hong Kong, John Aglionby in Jakarta and Jung-a Song in Seoul

Published: January 18 2008 02:29 | Last updated: January 18 2008 02:29

During the ancient Zhou dynasty, soyabeans were among China’s five sacred grains.

Thousands of years later soyabeans maintain their importance to the Chinese and most other Asians, but they have recently triggered much more down-to-earth preoccupations.

On Monday, 10,000 Indonesians demonstrated outside the presidential palace in Jakarta after soyabean prices soared more than 50 per cent in the past month and 125 per cent over the past year, leaving huge shortages in markets. And while the social unrest has not yet spread to other Asian nations, consumer frustrations are mounting.

From tofu in China to miso, or soyabean paste, in Japan, soya products are an essential ingredient in Asian cuisine as well as staple food for the region’s poor.

For many Indonesians, a piece of tempeh, or fermented soyabean cake, is often their only source of protein, and last year soya products accounted for 22 per cent of Indonesians’ protein intake, excluding rice, according to government data.

“It’s probably double that for poor people, who make up almost half the population, because it’s the cheapest protein source,” says Harbrinderjit Dillon, an agriculture analyst.

“The crisis shows how low the government has sunk. The public’s attitude is that if it can’t even take care of [soyabean products] then what can it do?”

World soyabean prices climbed to a record this week, partly because ­farmers in the US and Asia have instead been growing corn, palm oil and other crops to supply the biofuel industry. Bad harvests in Latin America and rising Chinese demand have added to the price pressure.

“It’s finally a trade-off between filling stomachs and filling diesel tanks in cars and trucks,” says Ashok Gulati, director at the International Food Policy Research Institute.

The Indonesian government is now taking tentative steps to address the price surge, but their impact could prove limited. Mustafa ­Abubakar, the head of ­Indonesia’s government logistics agency, said on Thursday that Jakarta would import lower-quality soyabeans than previously from the US to help contain the price surge.

Authorities in other countries are also starting to act. In South Korea, the national agency handling imports, Korea Agro-Fisheries Trade Corporation, is poised to increase soyabean imports to contain prices, while the Korean agricultural ministry has formed a taskforce to deal with the worries over price.

Meanwhile, food producers have been quick to pass on higher costs to consumers. In Japan, miso companies recently announced rises of 10 to 15 per cent.

In South Korea, soyabean prices increased by 10.7 per cent in December alone, translating this month into retail price rises of up to 30 per cent for soya milk, snacks and some other soya goods.

In Hong Kong, tofu sellers at the city’s Graham Street market have raised prices for the first time in at least 10 years.

“Our costs have gone up because the tofu factories have increased their prices twice since last October,” says Ng Chou, 73, whose family’s To Kei tofu store has been in existence since 1949.

A slab of tofu from Mr Ng that cost HK$4 (50 US cents) last October now costs HK$5.

An essential problem for Asia is its dependency on imports.

Japan imports 95 per cent of the roughly 4m tonnes of soyabeans consumed there each year, with three-quarters of the total coming from the US. Casting its ever larger shadow over world prices is China, already the world’s largest importer.

Chinese demand has been surging, particularly for soya­beans used as feedstock as a more affluent society raises its meat consumption. Chinese pork prices have climbed about 80 per cent over the past year – a much bigger source of popular frustration.

In the coming decade ­Chinese import demand is set to “dwarf all other countries” and account for more than three-quarters of the projected gain in world soyabean trade by fiscal 2017, according to the US Department of Agriculture.

“China is the biggest swing factor for the soyabean market. Period.’’ says Dong Tao, a regional economist at Credit Suisse in Hong Kong.

“Chinese soyabean im­ports are very volatile, as imports supplement domestic production, and the swings can be hard to explain.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Culture/Society; Foreign Affairs; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: biofuel; shortage; soybean; unrest
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To: Rummenigge

Tell me again how option trades are a positive sum trade.


61 posted on 01/23/2008 6:58:35 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Why are protectionists so bad at math?)
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To: Toddsterpatriot

Now first you tell me where on earth you saw a trade that is zero sum. (That’s why traders trade isn’t it ?)


62 posted on 01/23/2008 7:28:35 AM PST by Rummenigge (there are people willing to blow out the light because it casts a shadow)
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To: Rummenigge
Now first you tell me where on earth you saw a trade that is zero sum.

Futures and options trades.

63 posted on 01/23/2008 7:33:20 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Why are protectionists so bad at math?)
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To: Rummenigge
Then there’s those trading the options to buy on a certain date on a cerain price. These guys make the most of the money nowadays

Option traders as a group do not make money. Is that clear enough for you?

64 posted on 01/23/2008 8:29:17 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Why are protectionists so bad at math?)
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To: Toddsterpatriot

only that it means nothing if you are discussing the theory of weather or not the market for innovative financial products (nice name - it speaks to you) derivatives is driving the costs of the underlying goods or whatever is underlying.

And my sinister plan was to start a discussion on that.


65 posted on 01/23/2008 8:34:53 AM PST by Rummenigge (there are people willing to blow out the light because it casts a shadow)
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To: Rummenigge
derivatives is driving the costs of the underlying goods or whatever is underlying.

You'll have to explain how that works. Last time I looked, the buyers and sellers of derivatives were in balance.

66 posted on 01/23/2008 8:38:46 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Why are protectionists so bad at math?)
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To: Toddsterpatriot

And the emitting institutions ? Are making money - the faster the market the more.

And the hedge fonds - drive the market by having to buy after selling short - creating volatility thus driving the value of their options. (options are climbing on increased Alpha)

And if they are going long ? It’s getting to expensive to buy calls for the customers in real need for the underlying bean. So putting them on stock gets a cheaper alternative. Buying and selling increases with the hedge fonds in control of the cycles.

Volatility is expensive for those who have to buy a good.

Options are traded with high leverage and with borrowed money and with increasing speed - maybe it’s all meant to be symmetric but you can sell one side of the ballance and hold the other one and cover your debts from yesterday with the turn over of today because the derivative market is convex.

I have not understood all the details - but it all looks like a giant chain mail. (they are better the more complicated they are)


67 posted on 01/23/2008 9:11:57 AM PST by Rummenigge (there are people willing to blow out the light because it casts a shadow)
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To: Rummenigge
And the emitting institutions ?

I'm not familiar with this phrase. Please explain further.

68 posted on 01/23/2008 9:14:21 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Why are protectionists so bad at math?)
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To: Toddsterpatriot

the issuer !


69 posted on 01/23/2008 9:18:45 AM PST by Rummenigge (there are people willing to blow out the light because it casts a shadow)
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To: Rummenigge

The issuer of the option?


70 posted on 01/23/2008 9:26:23 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Why are protectionists so bad at math?)
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To: Toddsterpatriot

look up SG3R3N - it’s a call option on the nickel future of the LME - emitted by societe generale.


71 posted on 01/23/2008 9:30:51 AM PST by Rummenigge (there are people willing to blow out the light because it casts a shadow)
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To: Rummenigge

The profits (if any) of the option seller is offset by the losses (if any) of the option buyer.


72 posted on 01/23/2008 9:32:33 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Why are protectionists so bad at math?)
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To: Toddsterpatriot

then how come you have to buy for a higher price then you would be paid when you sold in the same moment ?


73 posted on 01/23/2008 9:33:57 AM PST by Rummenigge (there are people willing to blow out the light because it casts a shadow)
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To: TigerLikesRooster

Doing the bio-fuel boondoggle turns out to be not be such a smart holy cause.


74 posted on 01/23/2008 9:36:17 AM PST by AmericanVictory (Should we be more like them, or they like us?)
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To: Rummenigge
That’s a bid ask spread and it doesn’t change what I said.
75 posted on 01/23/2008 9:42:05 AM PST by Toddsterpatriot (Why are protectionists so bad at math?)
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To: Toddsterpatriot

It certainly is the nature of every deal between two people that the sum of money in their pockets remains the same.


76 posted on 01/23/2008 9:59:55 AM PST by Rummenigge (there are people willing to blow out the light because it casts a shadow)
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