US consumers stockpile rice, retailers ration grain
US consumers stockpile rice, retailers ration grain
Wal-Mart's Sam's Club and Costco Wholesale Corp have put limits on rice purchases.

Reports of rice shortage in India, Indonesia and Africa have spooked American consumers so much so that they're now hoarding rice, prompting major US retailers to ration rice purchases.

Bentonville (Arkansas), USA: The two biggest US warehouse retail chains are limiting how much rice customers can buy because of what Sam's Club, a division of Wal-Mart Stores Inc, called ''recent supply and demand trends.''

The broader chain of Wal-Mart stores has no plans to limit food purchases, however.

The move comes as US rice futures hit a record high amid global food inflation, although one rice expert said the warehouse chains may be reacting less to any shortages than to stockpiling by restaurants and small stores.

Sam's Club followed Seattle-based Costco Wholesale Corp, which put limits in at least some stores on bulk rice purchases.

Sam's Club declined to say if this is first time it has restricted sales of bulk foods. The limits affect 20-pound bags, not retail-sized portions. Costco President and CEO Jim Sinegal declined to discuss the issue on Wednesday with an AP reporter.

Sam's Club said it will limit customers to four bags at a time of imported jasmine, basmati and long-grain white rice.

The warehouse chain caters heavily to small businesses, including restaurants. Sam's Club spokeswoman Kristy Reed said she could not comment on whether the problem was caused by short supplies or by customers stocking up in anticipation of higher prices.

USA Rice Federation spokesman David Coia said there is no rice shortage in the United States.

At Bangkok Center Grocery, one of the main suppliers of Thai food products in New York City, manager Tom Pongsopon said the price of a 25-pound (11-kilogram) bag of Jasmine rice at his Chinatown store has gone up from $15 (€9.41) to $20 (€12.55) in a matter of months.

The Sam's Club restriction is effective immediately at all locations where quantity restrictions are allowed by law. It does not apply to other staples such as flour or oil.

''We are working with our suppliers to address this matter to ensure we are in stock, and we are asking for our Members' cooperation and patience,'' Reed said in a statement.

Sam's Club has 593 stores compared with 2,523 Wal-Mart Supercenters that combine a full grocery section with general merchandise.

Costco has 534 warehouses worldwide, most of them in the United States.

Wal-Mart spokeswoman Deisha Galberth said Wal-Mart stores have no plans for restrictions similar to those at Sam's Club.

''We are not seeing any signs of concern in the supply chain that would cause us to limit the sales of any items,'' Galberth said.

Relentless demand from developing countries and poor crop yields have pushed rice prices up 70 per cent so far this year, raising concerns of severe shortages of the staple food consumed by almost half the world's population.

The steep increases have followed similar jumps in the price of wheat, corn and soybeans that have added to Americans' growing grocery bill and led to violent food riots in poor countries including Haiti, Senegal and Pakistan.

Most of the rice eaten in the world is consumed within 60 miles (100 kilometers) of where it was grown, said Nathan Childs, an economist and rice expert with the US Department of Agriculture. Traditionally very little of it was traded in the world market.

But as populations crossed borders, the taste for specialty rices such as the Indian basmati, or Thai jasmine rice, which grow only in their areas of origin, spread.

US production of long-grain and medium-grain rice is strong, and the global crop is larger than ever, Childs said. But with some of the principal exporters of the higher-priced rices, such as India and Vietnam, shunning foreign sales to control prices at home and the cost of food generally going up, the price of rice has been climbing to new heights.

What adds to the price spike - and the run on specialty products like basmati - is that rice consumers tend to be very loyal. The market is highly segmented by type of rice and quality, and buyers will generally not take a substitute, Childs said.

''California's had a pretty good crop, but basmati and jasmine consumers have a history of not switching,'' he said. ''They could always have bought cheaper Calrose. But they don't.''

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