Thursday 3rd May 2018 |
Text too small? |
New Zealand commodity prices rose in April, bolstered by dairy prices and a lift in aluminium prices on the back of trade tensions.
The ANZ commodity price index increased 1 percent in April and is up 7.1 percent from a year earlier. In New Zealand dollar terms, the index gained 1.2 percent in April and 5.8 percent on the year.
Dairy prices rose 2.7 percent on the month in April due to a range of influences. One of the most influential appears to be sluggish European production across some of the larger export regions, ANZ agri economist Con Williams said. Lower seasonal supply from New Zealand and broad-based demand also lifted prices. According to Williams, Chinese participation at GDT auctions has increased back above the 50 percent level, which usually leads to higher prices. Also, Middle East buying looks like it could be getting a boost from improved oil prices, and Algerian powder demand remains high given domestic shortages, he said.
Aluminium prices jumped 8 percent versus the prior month trade and geopolitical tensions. China’s clampdown on excess production and capacity restrictions to improve air quality continue to support prices, said Williams. "However, the real boost was provided by US sanctions on Russia, which included limiting trade with one of the world’s largest aluminium producers, Rusal," he said.
Meat and fibre prices were down 1.9 percent as beef prices fell 4.2 percent on increased manufacturing beef supplies from New Zealand, Australia and the US. Wool prices, however, were up 2.6 percent on the month, driven by bargain hunting.
Forestry prices rose 0.2 percent on the month, marking 20 months of consecutive gains.
(BusinessDesk)
No comments yet
AIA - June 2025 Monthly traffic update
CHI - Q2 2025 Operational Update
July 15th Morning Report
BPG - Blackpearl Acquires US AI Platform to Accelerate Growth
TGG - Response to media speculation
ARB - Annual Meeting Date and Director Nominations
CNU - Q4 FY25 Connections Update
MOVE FY25 Results and Investor Briefing 29 August 2025
RYM - First quarter trading update
July 11th Morning Report