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Africa may ride out food price surge

Johannesburg - The United Nations may have sounded the alarm about soaring global food prices, but in Africa a string of bumper harvests and a changing diet means the political fallout may be more muted than to past price bumps.

On the financial side, a little bit of inflation will help push up domestic debt yields in the region's frontier markets, making bonds more attractive to foreigners and thereby giving currencies a boost.

But in contrast to the Food and Agriculture Organisation's global food index hitting 2008 crisis levels last week, maize, Africa's predominant staple, is showing few signs of stress, suggesting a repeat of the unrest of two years ago on the continent is unlikely.

South Africa, its biggest maize grower, has just harvested its heaviest crop in 30 years and maize prices are R1281/tonne - 22% above a 2010 low but only just over half a record 2008 high of R2240. 

The supply story is much the same in many other states in Africa, where food makes up a much larger chunk of the average inflation basket than developed countries, making their economies far more susceptible to food supply crunches.

A five-year fertiliser subsidy programme has caused steadily rising crops in Malawi, which had a surplus of nearly 1 million tonnes in August compared to consumption of 2.5 million.

Zambia had a maize export surplus of 1.1 million tonnes in November after its second record harvest in two years, based on good rains and growing investment in the farming sector.

Even Niger, which needed $250m in food aid last year to help feed 10 million hungry people, said last week favourable weather had put it on course for its best cereal crop in 20 years, with a forecast surplus of 1.5 million tonnes.

"In most of the countries, we're not seeing any meaningful food inflation. It's trickled higher in Kenya, but if you look at the other countries, it hasn't really moved materially," said Leon Myburgh, an Africa economist at Citi in Johannesburg.

Tensions

Given Africa's huge diversity, its 53 countries and its propensity to snatch unrest from the jaws of stability, it is too much to say, however, that it is insulated from the political risks implied by the rising global cost of food.

Food price riots hit Algeria last week, and in September, 13 people were killed in street fighting in Mozambique after the government hiked bread prices 30% by axing subsidies it could no longer afford in the wake of a wheat price spike.

But in Kenya, which saw inflation rise to 4.5% in December from 3.8% a month earlier amid fungal damage to its wheat crop, the chances of political fallout are diminished by the country's changing diet since the 2008 shock.

According to agriculture officials, eating habits have shifted from traditional maize and wheat to include more rice, potatoes and local vegetables such as amaranth. Potatoes are now Kenya's second-most popular foodstuff.

Shifting interests

Traditionally, investor interest in east Africa's biggest economy has been limited to equities because of an idiosyncratic way of calculating inflation that was scrapped last year in favour of a more orthodox, IMF-approved formula.

That outside preference for stocks may now change, especially if - as with other countries - its bond yields continue to track up, widening the spread with low-yielding US and European debt.

Kenyan 3-year debt is now yielding 5.9%, against just 2.8% in August when, as with most frontier African markets barring Zambia and Ghana, domestic debt was not worth the currency risk or hassle and cost of trading.

In Nigeria, the yield on the 3-year bond has soared to 11.5% from 3.5% in March as the government spent its way through nearly $20bn of "rainy day" oil reserves.

And in Uganda, 3-month T-bills are now yielding more than 7% compared with less than 4.5% for much of last year - although a currency at record lows against the dollar is deterring foreign interest.

That currency weakness will spur inflation in the longer term, putting more pressure on the central bank to head off the increases - something it has been reluctant to do since the emergency crisis-related easing of 2008/09.

For outsiders, that balance between moderate inflation that stimulates healthy bond yields, and runaway price increases that damage overall economic performance, will be crucial.

"There's been a huge amount of policy accommodation in Africa, and understandably, a reluctance to roll that back very quickly," said Razia Khan, head of Africa research at Standard Chartered in London.

"But at the same time the inflation outlook is not going to be that favourable. The big question is 'Do domestic yields rise fast enough to compensate for that or not?' If it's not the case, you're not going to see sizeable investor interest."
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