Bangladesh: Ginger price up 50% as traders cut import

Published 2022년 10월 2일

Tridge summary

Ginger prices in Bangladesh have increased by 50% in the past few days, with the Chinese variety selling at Tk150 per kg, due to traders reducing imports out of fear of losses caused by global price volatility and poor quality of imported Chinese ginger. This supply shortage has been exacerbated by the high costs of importing spices, including increased dollar prices and government measures such as raising LC margin for spice items to 100%. The country's reliance on imports for most of its ginger supply, with only a small fraction met by local production, contributes to market volatility.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

The price of ginger has surged 50% over the past couple of days as traders cut imports from a fear of making losses amid the global price volatility and local variety hitting the market. The Chinese variety of ginger which is currently 90% in the market sold at Tk150 per kg at Khatunganj – the country's largest wholesale hub for essential commodities – on Friday. It was below Tk100 ten days ago. Besides, one kilogram of Myanmar variety ginger sold at Tk55-60 per kg and newly-hit local variety at Tk70 on the day. "Ginger market has been almost fully dependent on imports for the last few months. Many importers, however, incurred losses for various reasons," Newaz Morshed, proprietor of M/s Ajmir Traders at the wholesale hub, told The Business Standard. As the global price has now been on the rise amid the local ginger starting to hit the market, traders have reduced their imports which ultimately caused a supply shortage of the spice, he added. Junaidul Haque, owner of M/s Makka ...
Source: TBS

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