Business Daily from THE HINDU group of publications
Friday, Jul 04, 2008
ePaper | Mobile/PDA Version | Audio


News
Features
Stocks
Cross Currency
Shipping
Archives
Google

Group Sites

Home Page - Sugar
Markets - Stocks
Agri-Biz & Commodities - Agricultural Policy
Policy proposals may help sugar realisations

Decontrol of cane pricing and sourcing more crucial

BL Research Bureau
Advertisement

Sugar stocks have been catalysed by reports that the sugar sector may be decontrolled with effect from the coming sugar season starting October 1. The partial decontrol now being proposed may aid better realisations for sugar producers and allow them greater flexibility in planning their production and sales.

Though the gap between the public distribution system and open market sugar prices isn’t very wide at present, the dismantling of the levy mechanism will enable producers to take fuller advantage of any uptrend in sugar prices, should the sugar cycle return to a buoyant phase. The proposals require the clearance of the Union Cabinet.

The “decontrol” now being proposed, will allow sugar mills to sell their entire production in the open markets. They are presently required to surrender 10 per cent of output (termed levy quota) to the government at subsidised prices towards PDS supplies.

Dismantling this “levy” quota may allow producers to sell their entire output in the open market. Realisations will benefit to the extent that the levy portion (amounting to 10 per cent of production) may now fetch open market prices of about Rs 15-16 per kg, instead of levy prices of Rs 12.2 to Rs 14.3 per kg. Mills in western Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka and many eastern markets may be particular beneficiaries as levy prices for these regions have been among the lowest.

More flexibility

There is also a proposal to do away with the monthly “release” mechanism for sugar, through which the Government decides the total quantum of sugar that mills may sell in the market each month. This relaxation may leave mills free to plan and time their production and marketing schedules without regulatory intervention and reduce their carrying costs.

But it could contribute to sharper seasonal swings in sugar prices. The release mechanism evens out any disparity in sugar availability between the peak crushing months (October- March) and the lean months (April- September).

However, the policy measures being proposed now will go only part of the way in easing the regulatory intervention in the sector. Liberalisation of command area norms for sourcing of cane and a market-determined mechanism for cane pricing will be the more crucial “decontrol” measures to be watched out for.

Related Stories:
Govt set to decontrol sugar industry from October 1
Centre mulling decontrol of sugar industry afresh

More Stories on : Sugar | Stocks | Agricultural Policy

Article E-Mail :: Comment :: Syndication :: Printer Friendly Page



Hiring

Stories in this Section
21% surplus rain in June, more seen coming


Reliance calls RCom for talks on MTN bid
United Phosphorus (Rs 267.25): Sell
Forex derivatives and ‘Armstrong’ Palanisamys
Fuel price rise will not impact domestic air travel growth: KPMG
India, China seen driving steel demand for next few years
Steel pipe makers to cut prices
Day Trading Guide
Policy proposals may help sugar realisations
Nortel in talks with Indian telcos for 4G
Print advertising of ACs up 11%
We could do better with some Govt help: Nasscom
Short covering helps public sector banks recover
Maize exports banned till October 15
Chilli exports increase to all-time high
Bankers brace for further increase in repo rates
Sensex plunges 570 pts
Siemens to make metro, train coaches in India


Life



The Hindu Group: Home | About Us | Copyright | Archives | Contacts | Subscription
Group Sites: The Hindu | The Hindu ePaper | Business Line | Business Line ePaper | Sportstar | Frontline | The Hindu eBooks | The Hindu Images | Home |

Copyright © 2008, The Hindu Business Line. Republication or redissemination of the contents of this screen are expressly prohibited without the written consent of The Hindu Business Line