2023 Mid-Year Trade Data Review - Exports Shrimp Insights
2023 Mid-Year Trade Data Review - Exports Shrimp Insights
2023 Mid-Year Trade Data Review - Exports Shrimp Insights
During the first half of 2023, shrimp buyers and sellers have
been suffering from low prices on one hand, and increasing
costs on the other. In this blog, I will present the latest
available trade data for each major supplier and market and
highlight the most interesting developments. Digesting this
data will help us better understand the impact of the low
:
prices and high costs on trade flows and how the market may
develop over the next few months. I will publish the blog in
two parts. In this first part, I will report on export data. The
second part will deal with import data.
Export value
Export markets
Outlook
Some industry sources in Ecuador argue that over the next few
months, due to low prices, slow demand, high production
costs, and other challenges, such as the consequences of El
Niño, Ecuador, too, will see its export performance weaken as
the major players will have to adjust their growth ambitions, at
least for the short term.
:
Others warn that all major players in Ecuador are still in
growth mode and that there are few signs that anyone is ready
to slow down their stocking activities. One of the reasons for
this is the recent investments that were made in new
processing capacities and the need to run these facilities at
capacity. The major impact of high costs and low prices would
be consolidation, where the larger companies will take over
the farms of those who cannot deal with the current costs and
prices. Some insiders are betting on producers in other parts
of the world reducing their production sooner than their
Ecuadorian competitors, which will allow Ecuador to continue
to grow.
We’ll have to watch closely what will happen over the next
couple of months to better understand the consequences of
Ecuador’s growth for the shrimp industry in other parts of the
world.
Export value
India’s shrimp export value is different. The year total export
value from January-May is $1.8bn, down by 13% year-on-year.
The export value fell the most in April and May, when it was
down by 23% and 22% year-on-year, respectively. At the
beginning of this year, the average export prices of raw L.
vannamei were almost $1.5/kg below the level of 2022 (Figure
5). In April and May, the gap closed to around $1/kg. But
combined with increased production costs, it's clear that in
:
India, too, farmers and vertically integrated producers have
been losing money.
Jan-
Jan-
Jan Feb Mar Apr May May
May
(MT)
Raw L.
16% 21% 23% -12% -10% 4% 201,242
vannamei
Raw P.
89% 106% 336% 178% 124% 157% 10,586
monodon
Value-
-15% -27% -27% -27% -23% -26% 21,702
added
Wild
-15% -21% -14% -36% -16% -20% 24,262
shrimp
Total 10% 9% 15% -14% -10% 0% 257,793
Outlook
It’s always difficult to understand what’s going on in India.
Reports from large vertically integrated producers in Andhra
Pradesh may differ from reports from farmers or smaller
exporters in other states where the shrimp industry operates
in isolated clusters with their own dynamics. But, while there’s
still discrepancy today, qualitative reports from the field and
quantitative data from public sources are getting more aligned
each month. Existing stocks from last year’s crop should have
been shipped, which creates less uncertainty about how to
interpret the export data. Broodstock import numbers do
suggest that a decrease in production of at least 20%, possibly
even 30%, for the first and second crop of 2023 is realistic.
:
I don’t doubt that India’s shrimp exports will decline further
over the next few months. But whether the drop is as deep as
some are expecting remains uncertain. Farm gate prices have
stabilized and Indian farmers will continue production at
some level to maintain their livelihoods, and Indian processors
and feed companies will support them because they also need
to keep their businesses going. How big the crisis becomes will
depend in part on whether Ecuador’s production will stabilize
or continue to grow further to compete for the market share of
Indian producers in the US.
Export value
:
According to another data source within the KKP, Indonesia’s
total shrimp export value between January and May 2023
reached $710m. The average value per kg, after a gradual drop
from a peak of almost $10/kg in April 2022 to around $8/kg
by the end of 2022, stabilized at around $8/kg. These
numbers combine the value of raw frozen and value-added
exports, so just provide an indication of the overall trend.
Export markets
Indonesia is highly dependent on exports to the US—68% in
2022, to be exact—and its exports to the US have fallen more
sharply than exports to other countries. According to the
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration,
Indonesia’s exports to the US declined by 41% year-on-year
over the first five months of 2023. The drop was the biggest for
exports of shell-on products (-51%) but was substantial across
the board. Peeled shrimp exports were the least affected, with
a decline of 24%. Only Vietnam seems to be doing (much)
worse, with a drop of 58%.
Export value
According to VASEP, Vietnam’s shrimp export value over the
first half of 2023 reached $1.6bn, down by 31% from 2022.
The average price per kg to the US and Europe, in particular,
dropped sharply, while the price levels of exports to the Asian
markets remained relatively stable.
Export markets
CONCLUSION
That shrimp farmers and processors worldwide are losing
money is obvious amidst increasing costs and low prices. How
the situation will evolve depends on whether shrimp
producers in Latin America and Asia will adjust their growth
ambitions and on whether consumers’ appetite for shrimp will
increase amidst declining consumer purchasing power in the
major shrimp markets.