Three reasons why a food-supply shock may be coming to Southeast Asia: Goldman Sachs

Three reasons why a food-supply shock may be coming to Southeast Asia: Goldman Sachs


Key Points

  • Food prices may rise on higher oil and fertilizer input costs as well as a potential El Niño event later in 2026, the investment bank said.
  • The combined effects could add 2.1 percentage points to existing food inflation over the next 12 months.
  • Net food importers Singapore and the Philippines will be most directly exposed to price shocks, with higher costs affecting countries right across the region.



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