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Hoarders Lose As Food Prices Crash By 40% - Business - Nairaland 1n4459

Hoarders Lose As Food Prices Crash By 40% (22943 Views)

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zero8zero(m): 2:31pm On Mar 07
While Nigerians continue to bask in the euphoria of a crash in food prices, traders who have hoarded grains are bemoaning the 40% drop in prices between December and March 2025.

In December, many traders bought grains for storage, intending to sell when prices rose by February-March, as has been the norm in the last two years.

Unfortunately for them, grain prices have continued to decline. For instance, a 50kg bag of beans that was sold between N100,000 and N140,000 has dropped to N75,000–N85,000.

Rice, which cost around N114,000 in December, is now about N52,000 in some places.
Also, a 50kg bag of soya beans dropped from N120,000 to N60,000, sorghum from N140,000 to about N35,000–N40,000, millet from N70,000 to N40,000, and maize from N120,000 to N45,000.

For tubers, 120 pieces of yam, which sold for about N300,000 last year, are now sold for about N180,000.

A trader from Iseyin, Oyo State, Nike Akanni, lamented her predicament, saying she took a loan of N1.5 million to buy bags of maize in December, hoping that prices would rise by the end of January. However, she is disappointed that the reverse is the case.

He said, “In December 2023, we bought bags of maize for N60,000, and by March, when prices went up, we sold them for around N120,000 and made lots of money. But this year, we were hoping that prices would go up.

Now, we have tied our money down because maize is selling for less than what we bought in December.”

Another trader from Katsina, Saleh Abu, also lamented the drop in grain prices, saying, “We don’t understand what is happening. We used all our money to store grain in December, and now we don’t have any money left to buy new stock.”

Adamu Musa from Kano State explained that, as of last year, food companies usually came to mop up their grains, but now most of them no longer do so, adding, “Even when some of them come, they want to buy on credit, but we traders cannot sell to them because our money is already tied up in stored grains.”

Abu attributed the drop in food prices to a lack of money in circulation, as many traders have to sell off their grains just to raise cash for other necessities.

On the part of the trader from Iseyin, she said there is a drop in prices because of the opening of land borders, as the Nigeria Customs Service no longer seizes their goods at the border like they used to, except on a few occasions when they want to extract money from them.

As of December 2024, food inflation had risen to 50%, worsening the cost-of-living crisis and leading to a spike in malnutrition.

In response, the federal government announced plans in July 2024 to grant waivers on food importation. Earlier, the government had also reopened land borders to allow food imports from neighboring countries.

While farmers expressed reservations about the policy, arguing that it would negatively impact food security, economists projected that increased food supply would help stabilise prices by reducing the demand-supply gap.

An analyst, Mr. Ismael Mohammed, told The Guardian that the increase in food supply triggered by imports has led to greater food availability, resulting in falling prices.

”The force of supply has been manipulated through importation, making food more available and leading to a drop in prices,” he said.
However, he noted that this method is not sustainable unless the government continues to import food, which is not beneficial for Nigerian farmers.

”Continued importation is not a good long-term strategy for Nigeria’s agriculture sector.”
It should be noted that food importation has eased the food crisis by increasing availability for consumption and animal feed production.

Nigeria’s food crisis has been worsened by insecurity, preventing many farmers from accessing their lands due to the threat of bandits.

Analysts argue that regardless of the government’s efforts to increase food availability, the most sustainable way to tackle food inflation is by improving security so that farmers can return to their farms.

The Managing Director of Green Sahara Farms, Suleiman Dikwa, has also emphasized the need for the government to address post-harvest losses, which have led to 40% of farmers’ produce going to waste.

https://guardian.ng/news/hoarders-lose-as-food-prices-crash-by-40/

18 Likes 5 Shares

zero8zero(m): 2:32pm On Mar 07
Tinubu effect. FX speculators, food hoarders, bitter people, all of them are losing.

87 Likes 9 Shares

helinues: 2:38pm On Mar 07
grin cheesy

God don catch them. Those are the enemies of Nigeria as they never pray for the price of goods and services to come down.

Politicians are not only our problem, some citizens too

122 Likes 14 Shares

vowiski(m): 2:40pm On Mar 07
Hmm
Saga16: 2:45pm On Mar 07
Na who you wan make e pay the price wey you dey charge?

6 Likes 2 Shares

helinues: 2:47pm On Mar 07
zero8zero:
Tinubu effect. FX speculators, food hoarders, bitter people, all of them are losing.

Those who are hoarding dollars would cry bitterly soon

85 Likes 4 Shares

Simisima(m): 2:49pm On Mar 07
But how come foodstuffs are still expensive in my area?

132 Likes 10 Shares

TimeManager(m): 2:54pm On Mar 07
He said,
“In December 2023, we bought bags of maize for N60,000, and by March, when prices went up, we sold them for around N120,000 and made lots of money. But this year, we were hoping that prices would go up.

See my naija people, we knew all the while that the inflation was artificial. They bought a bag in December,2023 then stored it until March 2024, then sold it for twice the amount they bought it. This was what they did throughout 2024. And these greedy people were still hoping that same thing will happen this year. Who do Nigerians like dis?


-Kiss the truth!

43 Likes 3 Shares

Philipponzaghi: 2:57pm On Mar 07
So they have been hoarding it? What is their benefit?

56 Likes 1 Share

zero8zero(m): 2:59pm On Mar 07
Simisima:
But how come foodstuffs are still expensive in my area?
That's the greed we're talking about. Those retailers do not want to bring it down.

18 Likes 3 Shares

FBIBOT(m): 3:16pm On Mar 07
Most food inflation is as a result of hoarders nothing else... Last year when the price of Rice crashed.... My foodstuffs vendor went to market to restock with the new price (65k) I think.... But merchant (hoarders) at bodija market have agreed not to sell..... To buy one bag you will have to beg nd still pay the old price.... Within two days the price skyrocketed again

27 Likes 3 Shares

FBIBOT(m): 3:17pm On Mar 07
Philipponzaghi:
So they have been hoarding it? What is their benefit?

Greed.... This is the major problem in Nigeria market especially foodstuffs.... Deliberately make it scarce (hoard) increase price

8 Likes 3 Shares

Racoon(m): 3:19pm On Mar 07
In so much that reality is different from all that is being banded here, that does not exclude the solemn fact that we Nigerians are wicked to ourselves.

26 Likes 2 Shares

JuanDeDios: 3:23pm On Mar 07
zero8zero:


https://guardian.ng/news/hoarders-lose-as-food-prices-crash-by-40/
Food prices crash 40%? Hmm. I've been telling the market women on the Mainland that they're bandits. 10% sef, we never see.

19 Likes 1 Share

merits(m): 3:24pm On Mar 07
zero8zero:


https://guardian.ng/news/hoarders-lose-as-food-prices-crash-by-40/
Exactly 💯 this whole meal costs me #1000 only.

*4 fufu =#400
*Titus fish=400.
*2 meat=200
*Total =#1000.
If I tell you the location make I bend.

12 Likes

JagaLove: 3:24pm On Mar 07
If true. Nice one

1 Like

cjudy(m): 3:24pm On Mar 07
In Agbadoria republic na him food price crashes

14 Likes 1 Share

JuanDeDios: 3:25pm On Mar 07
FBIBOT:


Greed.... This is the major problem in Nigeria market especially foodstuffs.... Deliberately make it scarce (hoard) increase price
Have you considered storage? Most farmers aren't into storage and need middlemen to uptake their produce and provide warehousing facilities. Otherwise, you'd have a glut of yam in September and no yams in the markets by January, there'd be a lot of waste and food crisis will be worse. I know there are greedy people, but these middlemen Nigerians love to demonise mostly provide an essential service.

18 Likes 1 Share

diverseconcepts: 3:26pm On Mar 07
Good News cool

1 Like

ednut1(m): 3:26pm On Mar 07
Shege banza

2 Likes

maestroferddi: 3:26pm On Mar 07
Abeg where the price crash?

I wan go buy from there...

36 Likes 2 Shares

4tomandchi: 3:27pm On Mar 07
I cannot feel this price change they are saying on social media oh

19 Likes

okosodo: 3:27pm On Mar 07
Propaganda kill una

25 Likes 1 Share

iwaeda: 3:27pm On Mar 07
Which food has crashed. I went to Oke -Arin with my wife over the weekend. Things are not smiling. 40% ko 140% ni. How much is bag of rice now. grin grin grin grin

34 Likes 1 Share

konshency(m): 3:27pm On Mar 07
Simisima:
But how come foodstuffs are still expensive in my area?
price only drop on newspaper not in reality

14 Likes 1 Share

unclejb2(m): 3:28pm On Mar 07
Propaganda no dey tire Tinubu.....

34 Likes

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