Flash Summary
Last five Flashes
Last five graphs
Note: All graphs issued with e-malt.com newsletters
are published in "Graph" section
of e-malt.com site.
Last five tables
All e-malt.com tables are published in e-malt.com Statistics section.
The Statistics section includes Barley statistics, Malt statistics
and Beer statistics. The tables related to barley are published in
Barley Statistics section, the tables related to malt in
Malt Statistics section and the tables related to beer in
Beer Statistics section.
Last five prices evolution
Access to E-malt.com
Do you know E-malt.com?
Dear E-malt Reader!
E-malt.com Newsletters Archive could be found directly on
e-malt.com
site. Browsing through our Newsletters Archive you may see all the issues you have missed.
To this purpose you just have to login e-malt.com and click on Newsletters link in the menu.
Reading our Newsletters you will be kept informed with the latest news
and events regarding malting and beer world.
You may also submit your own news, events or other information to the address
info@e-malt.com!
You may find updated malt, barley and beer statistics on e-malt.com
Statistics section.
Just enter e-malt.com!
Here you will find all tables issued with e-malt.com newsletters.
E-malt.com Agenda gives the possibility to keep you informed about the Events
planned to be held in the whole world related to the brewing and malting
industries. To this purpose you just have to login
e-malt.com
and click on Agenda link in the menu. Reading our Event Agenda you will find
out about the future symposia, conferences and festivals related to malting and
beer world. You may also submit your own events to the address
info@e-malt.com
E-malt.com has Trading Online system. The system is to be used for
malt/barley trading. One can register a malt/barley offer or a malt/barley
request. The registering person could be as a seller/buyer or as an agent for
seller/buyer. The User can see information about all active malt/barley offers
& requests. If needed the system allows user to buy/sell malt/barley due to
reasonable offers/requests. The way to do this is to confirm reasonable
transaction. Trading Online rules are available through the Internet in the
Trading Online as well as Tutorial (useful for persons who starts the system
usage). To visit the E-malt Trading Online first go to the E-malt.com site,
then click Trading Online link in the left menu of the e-malt.com home page.
For more details please contact info@e-malt.com
Thank You!
E-malt.com Links!
|
E-Malt.com Flash 38b September 17 - September 20, 2020
Quote of the Week
The only time you fail is when you fall down and stay down.
Stephen Richards
You are one of the
54,000 professionals of the brewing and malting industries
from
195 countries
receiving our free bi-weekly
E-malt Newsletters
published since 2001. You seem to be pleased by getting them as we have registered something like
3 mln readings.
To keep the high level of this informative reservoir in both brewing and malting industries and in order to continue to improve it we have to request a small contribution for full access to E-malt.com information.
The majority of our readers have responded positively thus giving us the possibility to keep developing this global informative reference.
A one-year membership costs only 181,- Euros and gives you full access to both our Full Bi-weekly Newsletter and website www.e-malt.com.
You can pay by credit/debit card or bank transfer (against invoice). Ordering is simple, use our online secure ordering system: click hereunder to begin - you can have access in just 5 minutes!
CLICK HEREUNDER TO SUBSCRIBE
One-year individual subscription: 181, - Euros
Two-year individual subscription: 320, - Euros
Save money when your colleagues join:
One-year group subscription for 2-5 members: 373, - Euros
One-year group subscription for 6-10 members: 555, - Euros
One-year group subscription for 11-20 members: 737, - Euros
One-year group subscription for 21-50 members: 983, - Euros
One-year group subscription for 51-100 members: 1229, - Euros
For a personal service contact our Membership staff :
Email : info@e-malt.com
Direct line : +32 (0)87 681381;
Fax : +32 (0)87 352234
If calling, please note our office hours are 9am - 5pm (Belgium time)
|
Currency Rates
Base Currency: Euro on September 18, 2020 |
Base Currency: US Dollar on September 18, 2020 |
|
1 EUR = 1.1804 USD
1 EUR = 0.9120 GBP
1 EUR = 1.5581 CAD
1 EUR = 1.6187 AUD
1 EUR = 123.7200 JPY
1 EUR = 6.1869 BRL
1 EUR = 88.6609 RUB
1 EUR = 7.9868 CNY
|
|
1 USD = 0.8471 EUR
1 USD = 0.7726 GBP
1 USD = 1.3200 CAD
1 USD = 1.3712 AUD
1 USD = 104.8000 JPY
1 USD = 5.2415 BRL
1 USD = 75.1124 RUB
1 USD = 6.7663 CNY
|
Currency Rates Chart
Equities of the Largest Breweries
Average Market Prices Change Trend
September 18, 2020 |
French Barley/Malt Crop 2020 Bulk |
EUR/T |
% |
2RS Malting Barley (FOB Creil) |
174.00-176.00 | |
6RW Malting Barley (FOB Creil) |
170.00-172.00 | |
Feed Barley (FOB Creil) |
168.00-170.00 | 1.20% |
2RS Malt (FOB Antwerp) |
368.50-370.50 | |
6RW Malt (FOB Antwerp) |
363.50-365.50 | |
German Malting Barley Crop 2020 Bulk Ex Farm |
EUR/T |
% |
Average Malting Barley Price |
160.00-162.00 | 0.33% |
Danish Malting Barley Crop 2020 Free on truck Ex Farm |
DKK/T |
% |
Malting Barley (East) |
1,174.00-1,176.00 | 0.86% |
Malting Barley (West) |
1,174.00-1,176.00 | 0.86% |
No change;
Price increase;
Price decrease versus last publication.
|
Click here to see our Market Prices History.
UK: Simpsons Malt planning new production facility in Scotland
...Click here
|
World: Carlsberg raises full-year earnings expectations
...Click here
|
Germany: Oktoberfest cancellation a blow for Germany's beer brewers
...Click here
|
Belgium: Beer and fries production could be severely affected by climate change - report
...Click here
|
World: New record grain crop predicted for this year
...Click here
|
Australia & China: Australian farmers will be forced to target domestic market as China effectively bans imports from Australia
...Click here
|
EU: Barley exports to third countries total 1.358 mln tonnes by August 31
...Click here
|
Ireland: Barley imports down, malt up in January-July this year
...Click here
|
UK: Malting barley shortage and good demand for feed-grade crop putting a base into prices
...Click here
|
Canada: Millennials driving recent growth of no- and low-alcohol beer category - Budweiser Canada
...Click here
|
Ukraine: Barley export prices pushed up by Chinese demand
...Click here
|
Graph of the week
Table of the week
Australian Malting Barley Exports by Destination
Prices Evolution
Barley Prices
Theoretical Malt Prices
These Days in Business History
17 September
2000 - The International Monetary Fund issues its World Economic Outlook report, forecasting that "growth is projected to increase in all major regions of the world, led by the continued strength of the U.S. economy, the robust upswing in Europe, the consolidation of the recovery in Asia and the rebound from last year's slowdown in emerging markets." Just weeks later, most regions of the world are tilting toward recession
18 September
1837 - Tiffany and Co. (first named Tiffany & Young) is founded by Charles Lewis Tiffany and Teddy Young in New York City
1842 - 1st edition of Pittsburgh Post-Gazette is published
1851 - The first edition of The New York Daily Times, which later became The New York Times,is published
1955 - The Ford Motor Company produced its 2,000,000th V-8 engine on this day, 23 years after the first Ford V-8 was manufactured
19 September
1849 - 1st commercial laundry established in Oaklan, California
1854 - Henry Meyer patents sleeping rail car
1876 - 1st carpet sweeper patented (Melville Bissell of Grand Rapids, Mich)
1887 - Dr. Graham Edgar, developer of the octane rating system, was born in Fayetteville, Arkansas, on this day
1888 - World's 1st beauty contest (Spa, Belgium)
20 September
1519 - Portuguese navigator Ferdinand Magellan sets sail from Spain in an effort to find a western sea route to the rich Spice Islands of Indonesia
1839 - 1st railroad in the Netherlands opens (Amsterdam-Haarlem)
1877 - Chase National Bank opens in NYC (later merges into Chase Manhattan)
Agenda
September 2020:
18 - 08 October: WBC Connect 2020 (Online)
October 2020:
13 - 16: China Brew & China Beverage (CBB) 2020 (Shanghai, China)
14 - 16: Expo Antad & Alimentaria Mexico 2020 (Expo Guadalajara, Mexico)
16 - 17: Great American Beer Festival 2020 (Online)
19 - 20: Planete Biere 2020 (Paris, France)
21 - 24: Beer 2020 (Sochi, Russia)
26 - 28: 107 Brewing and Engineering Conference 2020 (Leipzig, Germany)
30 - 01 November: Brussels Beer Challenge 2020 (Brussels, Belgium)
November 2020:
10 - 12: Brau Beviale 2020 (Nuremberg, Germany)
11 - 11: European Beer Star 2020 - Award Ceremony & Winners' Night (Munich, Germany)
18 - 22: Mondial de la Biere Rio 2020 (Rio de Janeiro, Brazil)
20 - 21: Beervana 2020 (Wellington, New Zealand)
25 - 27: Drink Japan 2020 (Tokyo, Japan)
26 - 29: Stockholm Beer & Whiskey Tastings 2020 (Stockholm, Sweden)
December 2020:
09 - 11: Drink Technology India 2020 (Mumbai, India)
February 2021:
05 - 07: Finest Spirits 2021 (Munich, Germany)
09 - 13: Great British Beer Festival Winter 2021 (The New Bingley Hall, Birmingham, UK)
11 - 15: HoReCa 2021 (Athens, Greece)
12 - 14: Cerveza Mexico Expo 2021 (Mexico City, Mexico)
21 - 24: Beer & Food Attraction 2021 (Rimini, Italy)
March 2021:
02 - 04: Beviale Mexico 2021 (Centro Citibanamex, Mexico City)
10 - 13: Festival Brasileiro da Cerveja 2021 (Blumenau, Brazil)
23 - 25: Beviale Moscow 2021 (Moscow, Russia)
29 - 01 April: Craft Brewers Conference & BrewExpo America 2021 (San Diego, California, USA)
April 2021:
08 - 10: Zurich Bier Festival 2021 (Zurich, Switzerland)
17 - 18: Zythos Beer Festival 2021 (Leuven, Belgium)
30 - 01 May: Tallinn Craft Beer Weekend 2021 (Tallinn, Estonia)
May 2021:
12 - 14: Craft Beer China 2021 (Shanghai, China)
17 - 23: Budapest Beer Week 2021 (Budapest, Hungary)
20 - 23: Mondial de la Biere 2021 (Montreal, Canada)
27 - 29: Copenhagen Beer Festival 2021 (Copenhagen, Denmark)
27 - 30: Wiener Bierfest 2021 (Vienna, Austria)
June 2021:
13 - 15: Bangkok Brewing Conference 2021 (Bangkok, Thailand)
15 - 17: Brasil Brau 2021 (Sao Paulo, Brazil)
July 2021:
13 - 15: Fdt Africa 2021 (Midrand, South Africa)
August 2021:
12 - 14: VIETFOOD & BEVERAGE - VIETNAM 2021 (Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam)
Malt News
|
UK: Simpsons Malt planning new production facility in Scotland
|
Simpsons Malt which produces malts for the brewing and distillery sector is planning a new production hub in the heart of Scottish whisky country,
...More info on site
|
Brewery News
|
World: Carlsberg raises full-year earnings expectations
|
Danish brewer Carlsberg raised its full-year earnings expectations on September 17 after positive momentum last month, buoyed by solid sales in Eastern Europe and
...More info on site
|
Germany: Oktoberfest cancellation a blow for Germany's beer brewers
|
Germany’s beer brewers were already reeling from the economic downturn in spring this year when coronavirus lockdowns shuttered bars and restaurants. They were dealt a second blow after the cancellation of Oktoberfest, the world’s biggest beer festival, which would have been kicking off this weekend, Yahoo Sports reported on September 16.
Oktoberfest which runs from mid-September until early October in Munich every year, attracts more than 6 million visitors, who spend about €440 mln (£405 mln, $522 mln) and drink 7 million litres of beer at the 16-day beer festival.
Indirectly, including hotels, taxis, restaurants and so on, Oktoberfest generated more than €1.2 bln for the local economy last year.
“A complete sales channel for us brewers just broke down overnight,” Andreas Steinfatt, director of gastronomy and marketing at the Paulaner Brewery Group told reporters this week. Oktoberfest is “a brand stage for Munich beers,” Steinfatt said.
“What the long-term effects will be for our industry is a bit like looking in a crystal ball at the moment,” Steinfatt added.
“The German beer market is down about 6.2% overall as of July, compared to last year,” Jörg Lehmann, chief executive of the Paulaner Brewer Group and president of the German Brewers Bund told reporters in
...More info on site
|
Belgium: Beer and fries production could be severely affected by climate change - report
|
The production of two of Belgium’s iconic products, beer and fries, could be severely affected by climate change, according to a report commissioned by the National Climate Commission.
The report, “Evaluation of the socio-economic impact of climate change in Belgium”, looks at the current forecasts for the effects of climate change, and the effect on a variety of economic sectors, including energy, fisheries, tourism, agriculture and transport.
“In recent years Belgium has experienced persistently mild winters, recurring drought episodes and a succession of hot summers, culminating in the unprecedented temperature extremes recorded during the summer of 2019,” says the report, which was written before this summer’s record-breaking temperatures.
“These phenomena have already affected agricultural yield, mortality figures and labour productivity loss, among other things.”
Increased temperatures, especially the higher extremes, have an effect on labour productivity, especially in outdoor work like construction. Heatwaves have a negative effect on health, particularly among vulnerable populations, although there is an opposite effect from milder winters.
Infrastructure is damaged by both heat and flooding, another consequence of climate change. But it is in agriculture that the effects will be felt in the production of two of Belgium’s most world-famous products, beer and fries.
A combination of drought and heatwave in
...More info on site
|
Canada: Millennials driving recent growth of no- and low-alcohol beer category - Budweiser Canada
|
Budweiser Canada revealed on September 16 that millennials are driving the recent growth of the no- and low-alcohol beer category, and the brand is introducing a new product – Budweiser Zero – to meet the demand.
According to consumer data, the 19-to-34-year-old age group – which includes millennials and older members of Generation Z – led all demographic groups in consumption volume of non-alcoholic beer including Budweiser Prohibition Brew, launched in 2016 as Budweiser Canada's first no-alcohol beer. Overall, 64% of no- and low-alcohol beer is consumed by those in the 19-to-34 bracket, with women most often choosing non-alcoholic beer as an alternative to sugary drinks while men see it as suitable for a variety of social occasions.
But, what's behind this trend? Research shows that it boils down to choice. Consumers – including both men and women in the 19-to-34 group – want more and better options, particularly when it comes to products that complement a balanced, healthy lifestyle. Under the current pandemic, our mental and physical health have never been more important, and millennials are taking control of their wellbeing and making positive choices.
"As a global leader in alcoholic beverages, we have an essential role to play in reminding Canadians
...More info on site
|
Barley News
|
World: New record grain crop predicted for this year
|
The IGC predicts a new record crop and a very comfortable supply situation in the world, H. M. Gauger GmbH reported earlier this month.
...More info on site
|
Australia & China: Australian farmers will be forced to target domestic market as China effectively bans imports from Australia
|
Australian farmers will be forced to sell their barley supplies to the domestic livestock industry or cheaper international markets after China effectively banned imports from Australia, farmers said on September 16.
China late on September 15 said it would ban barley imports from Australia’s largest grain exporter, just weeks after it slapped a more than 80% tariff on shipments from Australia.
The ruling has seen Chinese processors shun other Australian sellers amid fears that Beijing could ban other grain handlers.
As a result, Australian farmers will now target a domestic market, where demand is unusually high after a recent three-year drought wilted large areas of pasture.
“The financial hit will be enormous but we can look at domestic livestock market which doesn’t have much feed at hand after the drought,” Andrew Weidemann, a grain grower in Victoria told Reuters.
“The big issue is next year. If the season continues, there will be pasture and so farmers like myself will have to switch to other crops.”
China had until recently bought as much as 70% of Australia’s barley exports. But with that market closed, Australian farmers will receive about A$50 ($36.8) a tonne less than what China would typically pay.
The disruption of Australia’s barley market comes amid
...More info on site
|
EU: Barley exports to third countries total 1.358 mln tonnes by August 31
|
By August 31, Taxud showed EU-27 barley exports to third countries at 1.358 mln tonnes, 13% less than last campaign, H. M. Gauger GmbH
...More info on site
|
Ireland: Barley imports down, malt up in January-July this year
|
Ireland’s imports of maize, barley and wheat are down on 2019 levels for the period from the start of January to the end of
...More info on site
|
UK: Malting barley shortage and good demand for feed-grade crop putting a base into prices
|
A shortage of malting quality barley and good demand for feed-grade crop is putting a base into prices for the troublesome crop, according to
...More info on site
|
Ukraine: Barley export prices pushed up by Chinese demand
|
A sharp jump in Chinese demand has pushed up Ukrainian barley export prices in the 2020/21 season, analyst APK-Inform said on September 18.
Ukraine is a long-standing barley grower and Saudi Arabia was its main export market for years.
"But this year, Chinese demand is just off scale," APK-Inform said, noting that in July-August China imported 97% more Ukrainian barley than in the same period of the previous season.
The consultancy said Chinese demand had caused a 20% increase in Ukrainian barley export prices so far this season, with prices reaching $177-189 per tonne CPT Black Sea as of Sept. 18.
Ukraine's economy ministry said last month the barley harvest could fall to 7.3 million tonnes in 2020 versus 8.9 million in 2019, and that exports might decrease to 3.3 million tonnes in 2020/21 from 5.1 million in 2019/20.
|
|