IKAR.ru - main page
Institute
for Agricultural
Market Studies
Menu
RU
RSS
Search
RU
RSS
Вход/регистрация
Close
Электронная почта:
Пароль:



Забыли пароль? | Зарегистрироваться

 

Finally a bottom? Breakfast Brief

31 августа 2014 года

The grain market continues to stagnate as traders, managed money, commercials, and producers alike are trying to determine if a bottom has finally been found. Goldman Sachs is expecting livestock prices to underperform relative to grain and oilseeds over the next year as the Wall Street titan thinks things are due for a reversal. Specifically, with a record U.S. soybean crop, record South American output, and an expected slowdown in Chinese import growth, higher animal inventories and lower livestock prices are expected in the new crop year. The Australian & New Zealand Bank (or ANZ) says grain prices have offered sound value as a record U.S. crop has now been “fully priced” into the futures market. Adding to their optimism is the fact that eastern Australia remains dry, which will likely lead to a downgrade in the Aussie wheat and canola crops.

Concern is mounting in Europe on a few levels, both geopolitically and in the fields. The EU harvest will certainly be large but quality is dropping thanks to harvest rains, especially in France where three-quarters of the harvest is complete but only half of the grain taken off has a Hapberg falling number over 180. That being said, the U.K. is poised to provide Algeria & other closely-situated markets with the quality milling wheat that France normally exports to these markets. On the geopolitical front, the E.U. & U.S. are very close to imposing new financial sanctions on Russia for their “participation” in the fighting in Eastern Ukraine. Staying in Russia, wheat production estimates continue to rise as the harvest moves along, with I.K.A.R. now suggesting a 57.5 million-tonne crop. With some trade sanctions in place though, the ability of Russia exporters to move this grain out of country could be in question.

Coming back to the Americas, soybean production in Brazil is going to be larger for the third straight year as farmers there are continuing to plant more of the oilseed. In the U.S., yield estimates continue to tick up with the most recent Reuters survey of 20 analysts pegging corn yields at 170.5 bu/ac, well above the USDA’s forecast of 165.3 bu/ac and the previous record of 164.7 bu/ac set in 2009. Durum prices seem to be the contrarian in the wheat market as prices rose in July by eight per cent to $420/metric tonne ($11.43/bushel) FOB St. Lawrence Seaway in Canada, by five percent to $415 ($11.29) for FOB US Great Lakes, and by 24 per cent to $490 ($13.34) in France’s Port La Nouvelle (all prices in Canadian dollars). The logic behind the rise in prices is attributed to a smaller harvested area here in Canada this fall and declining quality in the EU crop (specifically in France, Italy, & Greece), much like its spring wheat brethren. Ultimately, crop development here in Western Canada is fairly variable but generally positive, with yields for spring wheat, canola, & durum reported to be all above their five-year averages. Fingers crossed as we’re close to taking the crop off.

Source: The Northern Horizon  |   |  Comments: 0   Views: 65


There are no comments yet. Be the first!


Only authorized users can comment.






About IKAR

Partners
Our news
Our services
Feedback
Markets

Grain
Flour
Cereal
Sugar
Oilseeds
Feedstuffs & Ingredients
Meat
Dairy
News

IKAR in Mass Media
Analytics

Market review
Market studies
Market prices
Graphically speaking
Information materials

Exhibitions & Events
Work in agriculture
Partners

Site Map
Users

IKAR. Institute for Agricultural Market Studies © 2002—2025   IKAR. Institute for Agricultural Market Studies
24, Ryazansky str., off. 604, Moscow, Russia
Tel: +7 (495) 232-9007
  www@ikar.ru
Facebook RSS
Рейтинг@Mail.ru

Language: Russian   Google translate: Google translate: Russian Google translate: German Google translate: French Google translate: Italian Google translate: Portuguese Google translate: Spanish Google translate: Turkish Google translate: Lithuanian Google translate: Chinese Google translate: Korea

Old site