The Brazilian sugar and ethanol industry is getting pummeled by a series of outside shocks associated with the global economic downturn. First, the drop in oil prices over the past six months has taken much of the steam out of initiatives to further the world's single proven, economically-viable alternative to gasoline - namely, sugarcane-based ethanol. A GP at a fund with a sizable investment in a major ethanol operation in Brazil told me last June that his worst nightmare was oil falling back to USD 40. Wonder what he felt when it dipped into the low thirties.
Second, credit has tightened up in Brazil, as is the case everywhere else. Mill owners in the Ribeirao Preto region were said to be hawking their neighbors' properties to outside investors, in a desperate attempt to convert their insider connections into cash. Not a strategy likely to succeed, what with private equity running for the hills, most major corporate projects canceled or postponed, and FDI overall slowing to a trickle.
In an attempt to stave off the worst effects of the ongoing financial and economic drama, BNDES, Brazil's national development bank, is now funneling billions of dollars into the industry, much to the delight of organizations like Unica, the association of sugarcane growers of Center-South Brazil; Abimaq, the trade group that represents Brazilian manufacturers of heavy equipment, used to harvest, crush, and process sugarcane; and the Brazilian Agribusiness Association, known as Abag, which speaks for a mixed bag of farm-related industries that includes ADM, BASF, Bunge, Cargill, DuPont, John Deere, Syngenta, and Monsanto.
On March 20th, BNDES announced that it would finance the expansion of ethanol storage capacity, a crucial bottleneck blocking the development of the industry. Without large-enough facilities to store ethanol, companies are forced to sell it as soon as it is produced, depressing prices near the harvest season, which begins in Q2 in Brazil's Center-South region. Prices then normally rebound in Q3, a few weeks after the bulk of the region's sugarcane has been brought in and processed into ethanol and sugar.
This past season, however, the economic crisis has dampened demand abroad. Overcapacity built up in 2006-2008 has further pressured prices, which have remained at levels near their harvest season lows. BNDES is now stepping in to offer a credit line of BRL 2.31 billion, or about USD 1 billion, for inventory build-up, in the hope that more regular supply throughout the year will alleviate problems stemming from wildly-fluctuating prices and working capital requirements, both of which hamper companies' ability obtain financing in capital markets, in Brazil and abroad.
-Henrique Oliveira
Ethablog breaks and analyzes news from the Brazilian ethanol industry. It also presents information on the country's successful 50-year experience with a large ethanol-powered fleet.
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