The Rural Voice, 2002-09, Page 64Grain Markets
USDA report takes traders bg surprise
Dare Gordon
is a
commodities
specialist
vyith LAC,
Inc.. Hyde
Park. 519-
473-9333.
By Dave Gordon
August l5. 2002.
The USDA monthly
supply/demand reports are usually
very mundane and bland as
government officials take a very
middle-of-the-road approach to
estimating and reporting. However.
the August 12 report surprised
everyone with the severe cuts in corn
and soy production and a resulting
reduction in the projected carryovers.
For the first time since 1996, corn
carryover is estimated below one
billion bushels for September 2003.
As well. the soybean carryover was
dropped to 155 million bushels.
At the market's open on August
12, soybean futures traded $.45
higher and corn traded $.17 higher -
moves not seen for years. The next
major activity to watch will be the
ProFarmer tour, which starts August
19. Tour participants will travel about
25,000 miles of roads all across the
Corn Belt looking at both corn and
soybean crops.
CORN:
Prior to the USDA report, most
private analysts pegged the corn crop
close to 9 billion bushels and the
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consensus was that the government
would not come in below 9.2 billion
bushels. Therefore, the whole trade
was left in shock when the production
number came out at 8.89 billion
bushels vs. the 9.792 billion in July
and dropped the 2003 carryover to
767 million bushels (the lowest since
1996.) The reaction has been
predictable with a gain so far of well
over $.20/bu in the futures market.
There is reluctance in some circles to
believe this report without some
confirmation, which will only come
in future weeks. However. some
well-respected crop scouts have been
in the fields and their reports confirm
what the USDA has projected.
If the production figure is
confirmed at harvest, $3.00 futures is
a real possibility. but growers who
have not sold any new crop
production should sell a portion well
before that price is reached. In fact,
today elevators are paying $3.95 -
$4.00 for new crop corn - a far cry
from what many of us expected.
The corn crop in Ontario is spotty.
Most areas north and east of London
have the potential of a bumper crop.
However, south and west of London
and eastern Ontario are suffering to
some extent. In Elgin county, silo
filling may start before the end of
August and the OCPA reduced the
projected crop to 213 million bushels
- a number well below the Ontario
usage of 240 million bushels. Does
this mean that prices will stay
relatively high for the next year? Not
necessarily. As history has shown us,
the highest prices may be seen before
the end of 2002.
SOYBEANS:
The USDA pared the 2002
soybean production but also reduced
the old crop carryover by 15 million
bushels. The projected 2003
carryover was reduced from 230 to
155 million bushels. Many crop
scouts maintain that the soybean crop
can still be saved with lots of rain in
August. A smaller crop and higher
prices in the U.S. is a double-edged
sword. As prices continue to go up,
South America will respond with
more and more soy acres.
In Ontario, there is a divided
opinion about the yield potential of
the soybean crop. Where soys are
good, they are very good and where
the crop is bad. it is very bad. 1 have
heard of soys in Elgin County that are
three to six inches high while other
areas have tall well -podded crops.
The best guess right now is a yield of
35 - 37 bushels/acre with about 25
per cent of the crop consisting of
food grade soys. This should indicate
a continuation of strong basis levels
throughout the coming year in the
crusher market.
As with corn, many analysts are
looking for much higher prices but
producers should be selling a portion
of their production into this market.
After all, the bulge in prices may not
be long lived.
The opportunity we are seeing in
the market today needs to be
rewarded with some sales. Futures
prices rally like this about once every
five to eight years and sharp grain
producers will forward sell one or
two crops when this move happens. 1
think all producers need to take
advantage of the prices that are
possible in the next six to eight weeks
because high prices rarely stay
around too long.
There is an old saying that a short
crop has a long tail and that means
that prices peak early and fade away
in the following months. 1 have seen
this happen several times over the
years including 1992-93 when
Ontario's crop was virtually wiped
out in areas. So I think the possibility
of seeing the highest prices by
December is very real. This time
frame should fit in very well with
producers planning for 2003. But it
also means that it is a time for action
not procrastination. None of us ever
know what the high will be in any
market or when it will occur, but a
seller must take the initiative and get
the crop sold when opportunity
knocks. Our opportunity will likely
be here in 2002.0
Information supplied by Dave Gordon,
LAC, Inc., Hyde Park, 519-473.9333.