| Analysis-Potash supply nears pre-war levels, pushing producers to cut output 
 ca.finance.yahoo.com
 
 Tristan Veyet, Jesus  Calero and Luca Fratangelo
 Wed, October 23, 2024 at 3:22 a.m. PDT 3 min read
 
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 By Tristan Veyet, Jesus Calero and Luca Fratangelo
 
 (Reuters)  - Global potash supply is returning to levels seen before the invasion  of Ukraine, as Russia and Belarus sidestep Western sanctions by  increasing shipments to Asia and South America, pressuring producers to  cut output and avoid oversupply.
 
 Potash  production is expected to reach 73 million metric tons this year, with  Russian exports at 12-13 million tons and those from Belarus at around  10 million tons, Julia Campbell, head of the potash pricing service at  commodity price agency Argus, said.
 
 Potash prices have started to normalise following a period of volatility following Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
 
 "Russian  exports dropped sharply after the war in Ukraine began due to financial  and logistical challenges. But these problems have since eased,"  Campbell said.
 
 Increased exports from Canada,  Jordan and Laos have also boosted global supply and brought down prices,  adding to the fears of possible oversupply, with a slight improvement  in demand expected only in 2025.
 
 During their  half-year earnings reporting, major potash producers such as Germany's  K+S sounded optimistic about growing demand and stabilizing prices.
 
 However,  analysts have since warned the abundant global supply would put a cap  on pricing, dampening the companies' earnings prospects.
 
 "I  don't think there's likely to be any sort of premium pricing or any  real pricing benefit as a result of the global supply shift and the  global trade shift. We saw that mostly in 2022 and into 2023 when prices  were still moderating," Morningstar analyst Seth Goldstein told  Reuters.
 
 As  such, Canada's share of global potash trade increased significantly in  2022, while those of Belarus and Russia declined. Prices have since  dropped below $300 a ton from a mid-2022 peak of $1,000, on weak demand,  data from Argus showed.
 
 "We are likely nearing  the operational cost of production, which may force some companies to  curb production," Rabobank analyst Paul Joules said.
 
 Canada's  Nutrien, the world's top producer of the mineral mainly used in  fertilizers, suspended its ramp-up plans for potash production in  August, citing market conditions.
 
 RISING SHIPMENTS, GROWING CONCERNS
 
 Russian  producers have increased shipments to China and India via new rail  routes since Russia exited the Black Sea grain deal last year. This has  boosted demand in Southeast Asia and South America, Morningstar's Seth  Goldstein said.
 
 Belarusian exporters have  shifted cargo from Baltic ports to Russian ones and are offering potash  at a discount via these new routes bypassing sanctions, he added.
 
 Meanwhile, Swiss-based Eurochem is expanding facilities at its Usolskiy and Volgakaliy sites in Russia.
 
 "The  MOP (muriate of potash, or potassium chloride) sector specifically, is  already experiencing a period of very heavy supply," said Humphrey  Knight, an analyst at CRU London.
 
 FARMING THE PRICE DROP
 
 The  fall in potash prices has improved affordability of some grains and  oilseeds, fertilizer consultant Delphine Leconte-Demarsy from the U.N.  Food and Agriculture Organization said.
 
 "In the  U.S., potash remains more expensive than it was before the price hike,  but this is compensated by comparatively higher crop prices,"  Leconte-Demarsy said.
 
 But she added local farmers were affected differently depending on logistical costs and exchange rates.
 
 "In  China, while potash is currently more affordable than before the price  hike for wheat and maize, depressed rice markets curb potash use for  this crop," she said.
 
 In Brazil, a major  exporter of agricultural products, potash prices are back to 2019  levels, boosting its use for more highly priced crops such as soybeans  and maize.
 
 Farmers will continue to reap the  benefits as the tight market is expected to keep potash prices below  historical averages, Rabobank's Joules said.
 
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