The Sunday Times newspaper reports that the decline in tea prices (which have almost halved in the past two months), and the large volume of unsold tea have caused a cash-flow crisis throughout the supply chain. However, last week demand had improved at last week’s
Last year
LBO quoted analysts as saying the downward trend in oil prices might reduce the buying power of big buyers like the Middle East and
As part of shoring up the industry against falling demand, earlier this month the Sri Lanka Tea Board purchased almost 1 million kg of tea at a value of Rs.230 million, the Sunday Times reported.
The intervention came after Sri Lankan government told the Tea Board to buy stocks to inject cash into the tea sector and stabilize it after nearly 60% of the tea at the Colombo Auctions remained unsold.
Colombo, which conducts the world's biggest tea auctions, saw prices hit 4.26 dollars a kilogramme in August before sliding to 2.19 dollars a kilogramme by the end of October, tea board figures showed.
However, while the government’s intervention helped the industry, traders say plans must now be formulated to dispose of these tea stocks – without putting downward pressure on prices.
"Buyers are carrying stocks of tea at prices well above the current market, on which interest is fast accruing at phenomenal rates," the Colombo Tea Traders’ Association (CTTA) said.
Meanwhile, the Private Tea Factory Owners Association last week thanked President Mahinda Rajapakse for his government’s intervention. “The tea industry which is dominated by the rural tea small holder sector benefitted by the timely state intervention under the direction of President Mahinda Rajapaksa,” the chairman of the Private Tea Factory Owners Association, Anil Perera, said in a statement.
On Friday Ambassadors and envoys
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LBO quoted analysts as saying the downward trend in oil prices might reduce the buying power of big buyers like the Middle East and
The Sri Lankan government has spoken of trying to arrange some kind of barter deal with major buying countries but the CTTA warned that it was an outdated concept.
"The avenue of barter trade between friendly countries is not available any more," the CTTA said, in reference to the liberalization of the market in keeping with ‘free trade’ principles, which ended such arrangements.
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