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JP Morgan: Food prices fuel inflation

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London - Rising food prices are stoking global inflation with many agricultural commodity markets driven higher by bad weather in key producing countries, a senior trader at JP Morgan said on Monday.

“If you break down the inflation numbers then the impact of food has been extremely significant,” Will Shropshire, head of investor trading, product development and agriculturals for JP Morgan said in an interview.

“Increased prices for key agricultural food components is undoubtedly going to have an impact on inflation,” he added.

High food prices have moved to the top of policymakers' agendas because of worries about the impact on inflation, protectionism and unrest.

The United Nations' food agency (FAO) said last Wednesday that food prices hit a record high last month, above 2008 levels when riots broke out in countries as far afield as Egypt, Cameroon and Haiti.

Shropshire said the rise in agricultural commodities was largely fuelled by supply issues.

“Pretty much all of those were driven by the weather,” he said, citing drought in Russia last summer as among a series of adverse weather patterns for grains production.

“I think we are now at a level that reflects the tightness of the balance sheets (of the commodities). I think prices could increase if we hit more supply concerns,” Shropshire added.

Shropshire does not believe that investor buying of agricultural commodities as an inflation hedge had been a key factor in price rises.

“It is food that is driving inflation rather than inflationary expectations driving people to invest in food,” he said. “I don't think you have got many investors buying corn at these price levels because of broad concerns about global inflation.”

Last year, US wheat futures prices rose 47 percent, buoyed by a series of weather events including the drought in Russia and its Black Sea neighbours, corn rose more than 50 percent and soybeans jumped 34 percent.

Alongside bad weather in Australia, Europe, North America and Argentina, rising Asian demand is at the heart of the spike. China, for example, is expected to buy 60 percent of globally traded soybeans in 2011/12, double its purchase of four years ago. - Reuters

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