Sam's Club, Costco Limit Rice Purchases

MARCUS KABEL | April 23, 2008 11:22 PM EST | AP

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A sign informs customers of a purchase limit on bags of rice at a Costco store in Mountain View, Calif., Wednesday, April 23, 2008. (AP Photo/Paul Sakuma)

The two biggest U.S. warehouse retail chains are limiting how much rice customers can buy because of what Sam's Club, a division of Wal-Mart Stores Inc., called on Wednesday "recent supply and demand trends."

The broader chain of Wal-Mart stores has no plans to limit food purchases, however.

The move comes as U.S. rice futures hit a record high amid global food inflation, although one rice expert said the warehouse chains may be reacting less to any shortages than to stockpiling by restaurants and small stores.

Sam's Club followed Seattle-based Costco Wholesale Corp., which put limits in at least some stores on bulk rice purchases.

Sam's Club declined to say if this is first time it has restricted sales of bulk foods. The limits affect 20-pound bags, not retail-sized portions. Costco President and CEO Jim Sinegal declined to discuss the issue Wednesday with an AP reporter.

Sam's Club said it will limit customers to four bags at a time of imported jasmine, basmati and long grain white rice.

The warehouse chain caters heavily to small businesses, including restaurants. Sam's Club spokeswoman Kristy Reed said she could not comment on whether the problem was caused by short supplies or by customers stocking up in anticipation of higher prices.

USA Rice Federation spokesman David Coia said there is no rice shortage in the United States.

"It's possible that small restaurants and bodega-type neighborhood stores may be purchasing rice in larger quantities than they do typically to avoid higher prices," Coia said about the warehouse chain restrictions.

A smaller chain, Natick, Mass.-based BJ's Wholesale Club Inc., said it is not imposing limits for now.

"At the present time, BJ's Wholesale Club is not limiting the amount of rice purchases made by our members, but, due to the current market situation, that could change at any time," spokeswoman Sharyn Frankel said in a statement.

In New York's Chinatown, shop owners said that they haven't seen people stocking up amid fears of rice shortages.

At Bangkok Center Grocery, one of the main suppliers of Thai food products in New York City, manager Tom Pongsopon said the price of a 25-pound bag of Jasmine rice at his Chinatown store has gone up from $15 to $20 in a matter of months.

People continue to buy rice, but the supply is OK at this point.

"We have enough for now, but I'm not sure about the future," Pongsopon said.

The Sam's Club restriction is effective immediately at all locations where quantity restrictions are allowed by law. It does not apply to other staples such as flour or oil.

"We are working with our suppliers to address this matter to ensure we are in stock, and we are asking for our Members' cooperation and patience," Reed said in a statement.

Sam's Club has 593 stores compared with 2,523 Wal-Mart Supercenters that combine a full grocery section with general merchandise.

Costco has 534 warehouses worldwide, most of them in the United States.

Wal-Mart spokeswoman Deisha Galberth said Wal-Mart stores have no plans for restrictions similar to those at Sam's Club.

"We are not seeing any signs of concern in the supply chain that would cause us to limit the sales of any items," Galberth said.

U.S. rice futures soared to an all-time high Wednesday as investors bet that surging world demand will continue to pressure already dwindling stockpiles. Rice for the most actively traded July contract jumped 62 cents to $24.82 per 100 pounds on the Chicago Board of Trade, after earlier rising to a record $24.85.

Relentless demand from developing countries and poor crop yields have pushed rice prices up 70 percent so far this year, raising concerns of severe shortages of the staple food consumed by almost half the world's population.

The steep increases have followed similar jumps in the price of wheat, corn and soybeans that have added to Americans' growing grocery bill and led to violent food riots in poor countries including Haiti, Senegal and Pakistan.

Most of the rice eaten in the world is consumed within 60 miles of where it was grown, said Nathan Childs, an economist and rice expert with the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Traditionally very little of it was traded in the world market.

But as populations crossed borders, the taste for specialty rices such as the Indian basmati, or Thai jasmine rice, which grow only in their areas of origin, spread.

U.S. production of long grain and medium grain rice is strong, and the global crop is larger than ever, Childs said. But with some of the principal exporters of the higher-priced rices, such as India and Vietnam, shunning foreign sales to control prices at home and the cost of food generally going up, the price of rice has been climbing to new heights.

What adds to the price spike _ and the run on specialty products like basmati _ is that rice consumers tend to be very loyal. The market is highly segmented by type of rice and quality, and buyers will generally not take a substitute, Childs said.

"California's had a pretty good crop, but basmati and jasmine consumers have a history of not switching," he said. "They could always have bought cheaper Calrose. But they don't."

___

Associated Press writers Stevenson Jacobs and Verena Dobnik in New York, Juliana Barbassa in San Francisco, Dan Catchpole in Seattle and Rodrique Ngowi in Boston contributed to this report.


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Lets see... this story first appeared on the Right Wing propagandist rag The New York Sun. Then on the Right Wing propagandist network, FOX News. Then Right Wing propagandist tool Glenn Beck and now it's getting mentioned on the Right Wing Rupert Murdoch owned propaganda rag, The Wall Street Journal.

Hmmmmmm...

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:11 AM on 04/26/2008

I thought the corporatins believed in free market forces. How can they take my purchase history, and refuse to allow me to increase that? Do they know if I have a additional family living with me? How does a corporation no what I do and don't need? If I want an extra 50 pounds of rice or flour, it's none of their damned business. Am I supposed to believe the same rules apply to politicians. What's with this class system that's pushed out the US Constitution? Are we all judged by who we know and how much money we have?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 09:48 AM on 04/25/2008

Free market: you don't have to buy, and they don't have to sell. No one is forced to do anything they don't want to with their own private property. Forcing the stores to sell to you even when they don't want to would not be a free market.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 06:03 AM on 04/26/2008

Yeah, and it would be sooo hard to go to 2-3 different stores in order to get the amounts that you would need.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:12 AM on 04/26/2008

No one is forcing you to shop at Sam's Club. If you don't like their policies, don't shop there. Just go some place else. I haven't entered a Walmart or Sam's Club in years.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 04:11 PM on 04/25/2008

yeah but Jason has a good point. It's all about the free market as long as it benefits these a-holes.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:58 AM on 04/26/2008

i reckon that this is some class of signal to nations with NO rice that we care.
we are reelin' our consumption, now, to a mere 80# of rice per visit to sam's.
that must make a poor distended, malnourished belly feel all full.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:24 AM on 04/25/2008

This is just the beginning. Food rationing and deep recession/depression will lead to smaller grocery stores closing and WalMart coming to the rescue. They are already planning medical clinics for WalMarts. How to keep track of your food ration and medical information? The microchip! Then when the bio-terror, er, I mean bird flu comes, vaccinations will be given at WalMart as well. Don't get microchipped and don't get bird flu shots. At that point, take to the hills. What a nightmare. You would think our military would oust the clowns in charge and give us back our country.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:32 AM on 04/25/2008

Please go to the white house and thank Bush for the predicament we are all in. What is next, concentration camps?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 05:46 PM on 04/24/2008

FEMA camps. Look it up.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 06:04 AM on 04/26/2008

Please notice that it is rice futures that went up. No supply problem, just speculators worrying about the future. Same with oil prices. Everything's based on speculation about the future.
Anyone catch Lazio's speech in Congress about closing the Enron loophole which allowed such wild speculation in oil futures, which previously had been controlled? Same with rice, follow the money to the hedge fund/futures traders. And see who's getting rich.
Of course, MSM won't cover that part of the story because it involves work.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:50 PM on 04/24/2008

The minute someone sold big money on biofuels is when a whole host of chain reactions took place. You can read how this works in Lester Brown's books. No analysis, just facts and how they cause various, predictable consequences.

That and the de-regulated price of oil futures gives us the perfect storm. We're officially the third world country that Bush has dreamt us to be. All that's left is to watch roads and bridges crumble, watch as earthquakes rock the Midwest and California where only the wealthy will be able to activate their insurance provided rescue; watch as the government cannot respond to any kind of catastrophe; watch as entire communities succumb to lawlessness because their national guard is in Iraq; watch as private security is called in under the 2007 Military Act that gave Bush the power to call martial law; watch as private security shoots up entire towns with impunity as given to them under that same act; and if you even bother, watch as FOX news describes the chaos as good; watch as McCain and his right wing religious kooks go live on TV to predict the return of Christ.

And then watch everything fall apart because, ahem, Christ is not coming back as predicted. And this is just the beginning.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:20 PM on 04/24/2008

Alright all this sems to be happening all at once fuel,now food,it could be all manipulation by Wall Street speculaters,or it could be OVERPOPULATION,is causing it,or combo of both,or neither just GREED,no one knows , I find it very interesting this is all hitting all at once ,it looks to me to be HYPER INFLATION in which case it's being caused by falling dollar and other currencies about to fall causing hyper inflation in turn worldwide depression in turn riots and worlwide chaos in which we are already seeing ,cause this time unlike last depression of the 1930's when there where a whole lot less people in our world,there is a whole lot more people because of overpopultion in the world in the 21st century, and so mixing anger,with no money,no jobs,high food,high fuel ,to many people in our world,put all that in a mixture and worldwide revolution is going to be the probable outcome and it won't be non violent i would venture to guess,cause that's the only thing unfortunatley Government agencies only understand.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:05 PM on 04/24/2008

No one knows? Pull your head out of the sand buddy. Or better yet, pull it out of the tube.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:22 PM on 04/24/2008

My head has been out of the sand for a long time,I've blogged about all this at least a year now,and it's all coming to fruition ,I agree with your comment above mine,I've stated similiar comments over the last year ,and yes America is turning into a third world country,so we can be the same as Mexico to the south,is the master plan by Bush regime,next up North American Union,then will be one giant third world country,

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 02:42 PM on 04/24/2008

Yesterday in the elevator somebody piped his comment about food prices in the packed room: "five bananas are now 69c double from a year ago". How self absorbed do you have to be to get the problem? You can have as much money as you want, if there are no bananas then you cannot buy bananas. Or if you earn a Dollar a day, bananas is not going to be on your menu. How many kids in this country, which some claim to be the richest in the world, that go to bed hungry? Of course measuring money as the nation's wealth, is misleading the public to believe that hungry children are more of an annoyance than a qualifier. It is morally reprehensible to me to make corn into fuel, so Mr Big Shot with the little dick needs to drive a Hummer to do something for his short comings. But it brings something fundamentally flawed to the table in this country: that those big mouth Christian fundamentalist that rather take children from their mothers to indoctrinate them do care about an agenda and less about hunger. In the third world this hits harder than ever. Don't you think that we are fertilizing the ground of future extremist terrorism? Is anybody out there who can stone faced suggest that this is just a form of natural selection in a post social Darwinian way? Did anybody have actually history in school to see the connection between hunger and war or revolutions?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:03 PM on 04/24/2008

If you are a believer in Peak Oil (look it up and reach your own conclusion) then this is the beginning.
OR, we are being manipulated by a variety of groups, business interests and nations (all with there own agendas, not a conspiracy) and they are making money and playing international politics.

I work as an architect. I can tell you that the run-up on construction cost over the past 3 years has been unprecedented. A building that cost 100million to build (A court house in Colorado) was affected by inflation that now makes it cost 150million, in two years. So if Steel, concrete, copper and rubber are an indication, then shortages in other areas are just starting and this is the start. Its worth finding out for yourself and make your own assessments since no one opinion seems to know past speculation.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:55 PM on 04/24/2008

Peak oil is the foundation of the problem, tightening supplies of that essential commodity. The manipulation by various groups is only serving to magnify the effects of it. The plateauing of supply would not cause the huge increase in price if it were not for these groups.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 06:10 AM on 04/26/2008

Maybe I missed it but didn't see a mention in this article about the long term trend in the price of rice. The price of rice in the world market has moved in just the last 2-3 years from like $300/ton to close to $900/ton. Can anyone confirm the exact #'s? Whatever the price rise has been it is real and substantial. It is but one more shortage the future faces.
And who is addressing the crisis the future faces as a single issue? No one. We read instead about water or oil or fish or forests shortages. The environmentalist focuses on global warming or species extinction or poisoning the environment or overpopulation but leadership in the world is not Bush or his replacement. Leadership in the world is the multi-national corportation and they will work diligently to avoid the issues mentioned as one. We are all completely occupied by the corporate agenda whether we are scraping by or living large.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:36 PM on 04/24/2008

Here we go! What is left that has not been f'd up by the GOP? To me everything is an extension of the first Bush...Even this...Our "Exit!" Here is the last 2 minutes of a soldiers life. Click here and pass it along. http://www.myspace.com/Craftymusic

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:25 PM on 04/24/2008

Supply and demand is not a law, it is a policy. The financial elites control your gas and oil and now your food. Multinational corporations control the financial system, too.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:10 PM on 04/24/2008

Everytime prices of commodities go up there is hoarding, which according to the principle of suppy and demand, only drives prices higher. But, is there really a shortage or is this just another scam similar to that which occurred with sugar and coffee in the past? Could gas rationing be far behind?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:11 AM on 04/24/2008

ITS A DAMN MEDIA SCAM, AND NOT ONE QUOTE CAME FROM THE "GROWERS"....OHHHH BULL...DON'T TELL ME ABOUT QUOTES FROM FOOD BROKERS, AS A SOURCE PLEEEEZ. BUT WHAT ISN'T BEING TALKED ABOUT AND IT IS MUCH MORE IMPORTANT IS THE COMMUNIST LIKE TACTICS OF THE TEXAS POLICE FORCES -ON THOSE INNOCENT KIDS: THEY WILL BE SCARRED FOR LIFE AND EVERYONE IS AFRAID TO TALK AND WRITE ABOUT IT? FUNNY, BUT PUTIN, CHINA AND NORTH KOREA, ARE ALL BURING UP THE PHONES SAY, "AW SOO WHAT ABOUT THEIR CIVIL RIGHTS RECORD IN USA, NOW? HEHEHEHEHEHEHE...OH FORGOT, THERES A DOUBLE STANDARD FOR AMERICA...." RICE SHORTAGE? NO, BUT A GOOD DISTRACTION........

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 12:48 PM on 04/24/2008

what? too much coffee

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 06:07 PM on 04/24/2008

huh?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 03:48 PM on 04/24/2008

Rice will cause the next world crisis since it is a staple around the world, we have pasta and potatoes and they have rice, that's all they've got. Instead of the US hoarding rice, it should be exporting it to the poorer countries

India . ..... Banned the export of rice.
Japan..... Just banned the import of rice because of skyrocketing prices.
Phillipines..... shortages of rice
USA ............. hoarding rice.

Let's export our rice or we will see riots in the streets of Asia, they have already started.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 11:04 AM on 04/24/2008

I'm not sure why riots in the streets of asia should be our concern. Not to sound cold hearted or anything, but that is their problem. We never told them to create more people than they could feed on their own.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 06:14 AM on 04/26/2008

The U.S. produces rice?

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:37 AM on 04/25/2008


and just within the last seven days, australia confirmed that its entire rice crop this year has been destroyed by drought.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 01:32 PM on 04/24/2008

forget Gold. Rice is where it's at

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 06:08 PM on 04/24/2008

Wow everybody's buying into the scam.

Grocery stores have always tried to get customers to buy more than they need. It's why sale priced items are marked 2 for $5 rather than $2.50 each. They're using subliminal suggestion to get you to pick up two.

Now they figured out a way to get you to buy FIVE bags of rice.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:38 AM on 04/24/2008

It's not just at the big warehouse stores either. I was shopping in my local grocery store yesterday and noticed the rice section was 2/3 empty. I just thought there was a delivery or stocking problem at the store. I did hear on NPR about 6 or 7 months ago, during a show about alternative fuels, a panel discussing the impact of dedicating so much of the food supply to alternative fuels- how it could possibly cause a food shortage in the future. Scientists were looking into how switchgrasses were the best option for fuels- no need to dedicate food supplies or agricultural land to corn for ethanol.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:34 AM on 04/24/2008

If only we coud do this with other items here in the United States, like housing, jobs, SUVs, and health care.

Rationing really is the way to go. Why should one group of priveledged people have excess when another group goes without? People don't have homes yet others have more than two (and those being way more than they actually need.)

Its time to stop this greed and start thinking about the long term ramification of our lifestyle of excess.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:22 AM on 04/24/2008

"If only we coud do this with ... health care."

Okay genius, here's how we ration health care: we have one antibiotic, and two people that need it? Who gets it?

Under your system, it would be given to the most politically connected person.

rationing never works.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:41 AM on 04/24/2008

Sorry, I'm kind of not into the commune thing.

One can conserve without going overboard you know.

You do realize that if you redistribute wealth evenly throughout the entire globe it would take only 48 hours (or approximately that amount of time) for things to go right back to the previous status quo?

In other words, it's the consciousness of the people that dominates the poverty and the wealth - not the money itself.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 10:37 AM on 04/24/2008

The poor lacking in that oh-so-vital element, GREED? Survival of the greediest? Greedy, greedier, greediest? The poor of the world aren't asking for laptops and suvs, they just feel a certain entitlement to eat a bowl of rice when they are hungry.

favoriteFavorite Flag as abusive Posted 07:01 PM on 04/24/2008

I live in San Francisco and went to Costco on a toilet paper/earthquake canned food shop yesterday. People were actually buying multiple gigantic bags of rice, and the store had a limit of five bags per person. I think the posted limit of five bags had the effect of encouraging people to hoard. I had watched food riots in Haiti, Malaysia, and Africa on CNN just before going to Costco, so it was actually disconcerting to see people people hoarding the ric