Russian grain exporters to supply directly to 13 countries, bypassing foreign traders

Published 2024년 10월 21일

Tridge summary

Russian grain exporters are set to supply grain directly to 13 countries, including Egypt and Tunisia, bypassing foreign intermediaries to prevent low-price sales and intermediary reselling. This decision, supported by the Russian Ministry of Agriculture, follows the exit of multinational companies from the Russian grain market. The Union of Grain Exporters has established indicative prices for Russian wheat, with a minimum unofficial price of $250 per ton. This strategy may necessitate the development of new infrastructure by Russian exporters and could alter market dynamics.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Russian exporters will supply grain to 13 countries directly, without foreign intermediaries, the Grain Exporters Union told Interfax on October 18. The decision was made after a meeting on October 11, at which it was recommended that exporters limit sales exclusively to them, committing not to sell Russian grain to winners of foreign tenders. This new strategy is aimed at curbing sales at low prices and eliminating the practice of intermediaries reselling Russian grain. According to the union's general director Eduard Zernin, from October 11, deliveries will be made directly to government agencies and sovereign buyers in Egypt, Tunisia, Algeria, Morocco, Jordan, Saudi Arabia, Bangladesh, Qatar, Kuwait, South Korea, Pakistan, India and Iraq. Traders reacted to the news by noting that the flow of Russian grain is becoming increasingly limited and controlled, especially as state agencies become the world’s largest buyers of wheat, with Egypt leading the imports with 2.9 million ...
Source: Oilworld

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