• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Grain Prices....

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Grain Prices....

    Wheat, YAWN, kind of boring.

    Canola showing life. When will it hit twelve...any bets?

    A bit of life in the mustard market since harvest.

    No fireworks in green or yellow peas, greens have premium over yellows.

    Flax? Renewed interest from China. I did quite well last year at $13.20 picked up(milling quality). Will I get it this year? We have half the bushels/acre we had last year on twice as many acres this year!....shouldn't that mean I need twice the price this year?

    Malt barley versus feed barley?

    #2
    Where did your posts go wiseguy?

    A marketing forum without any grain marketing/pricing threads!?!?!?!

    Comment


      #3
      Canola - could try asking for 12 now in deferred months. Might trigger.

      Comment


        #4
        11.25 now special deliver tomorrow for Canola

        Barley malt 4.50 I want 5

        Wheat yawn and less each day available

        Comment


          #5
          Wheat - Portland asking prices have possibly turned the corner. The search for protein will continue.
          Very bleak outlook for low protein

          Comment


            #6
            Wheat is creeping up if the dollar heads to 70 we should be over $7.50 again. The protein discounts have decreased but are still too high!

            I'm thinking $12 canola will be sooner than I earlier predicted, the crop will prove to be smaller than the industry estimates. At the same time last year price was $1/bushel less and we hit $12 in spring.
            Malt is $4.50 for Metcalf and Copeland. Lots of high quality, maybe the drought areas were not significant malt growing areas?
            Can't see high quality malt price going much lower.
            Last edited by Oliver88; Oct 31, 2017, 09:30.

            Comment


              #7
              July canola about $12.10 without any basis. ...wouldn't take much more to get $12 net to Producer with a reasonable basis. Anyone thinking twelve is enough? Another dry season across Western Canada would be outright disasterous without the sub soil reserves we had in 17.....


              Oh but this isn't how to market...sell the grain and take a position in the futures market. Good luck after alot of "marketers" relinquish their power. You have even less control when its not in your "possession". More stupid talk from a Sandbox Farmer!

              Comment


                #8
                Originally posted by farmaholic View Post
                July canola about $12.10 without any basis. ...wouldn't take much more to get $12 net to Producer with a reasonable basis. Anyone thinking twelve is enough? Another dry season across Western Canada would be outright disasterous without the sub soil reserves we had in 17.....


                Oh but this isn't how to market...sell the grain and take a position in the futures market. Good luck after alot of "marketers" relinquish their power. You have even less control when its not in your "possession". More stupid talk from a Sandbox Farmer!
                July is $11.93 at Yorkton LDC

                Comment


                  #9
                  Originally posted by Oliver88 View Post
                  July is $11.93 at Yorkton LDC
                  ...."moving targets" are hard for buyers to hit...lol.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Wheat up today. A close in this area and again tomorrow is a positive

                    Comment


                      #11
                      What happened in wheat today?
                      cbot + 8 cents
                      kcbt + 10 cents
                      Mge + 8 cents

                      all in $USD of course!

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Australian grain production is expected to take a big hit with volatile weather around the country making it harder for farmers to match the record-breaking yields from just twelve months ago.

                        Farmers are expected to produce 35 million tonnes this year. That might sound like a lot, but it's 41 per cent down on last year's record breaking crop of 59 million tonnes.

                        A dry winter in Western Australia and severe frost events on the east coast will likely result in the impending harvest to be eight million tonnes shy of the national five-year average.

                        The mediocre outlook comes from rural lending specialist Rabobank which has released its 2017/18 winter crop production forecast.

                        Rabobank agricultural analyst Wes Lefroy said as harvest gets underway in the coming days and weeks, there will be some disheartened farmers.

                        "It's been a disappointing year," he said.

                        "We were never expecting to match the 59 million tonnes of record production that we had last season but, equally, we would have like to at least reached the five-year average."

                        Mr Lefroy says the shortfall was almost purely due to poor yields, with a similar area planted in 2017.

                        "Hectares were down slightly, but not significantly," he said.

                        "We saw a four per cent fall year on year in planted hectares across the nation and really this is due to cut hectares in Western Australia, purely due to the dry start there."



                        Tale of two seasons

                        It was a dry start to the season in Western Australia with many farmers experiencing their lowest winter rainfall on record. Rainfall in recent weeks, however, had made for a soft spring finish and increased yields.

                        On the east coast, a better start to the season didn't mirror the finish with many farmers experiencing devastating frosts.

                        "Really the story across the nation has been a tale of two halves," Mr Lefroy said.

                        "The west had a poor start while in the east, Victoria in particular had a good start, even the Riverina too had a good start, but from then on in the east, it's gone backwards and the conditions have deteriorated.

                        "Frost has certainly been a factor in New South Wales and northern parts of Victoria where some losses have come in between 80 and 100 per cent."

                        "There are actually farmers in New South Wales that are looking to now graze out crops in canola and also in cereals."

                        He said New South Wales was looking at its lowest combined yield in a decade.

                        "Irrespective of where you were in the state, conditions really went back from [seeding]."

                        "It's really been those drier conditions and even in some of those areas as I mentioned, the frost has really put the nail in the coffin for that year and actually made more damage to the crop than the dry conditions have."



                        Prices move higher to reflect low grain supply

                        The yield losses are across the board with wheat down almost 20 per cent on the five-year average, barley 18 per cent down and canola down five per cent.

                        But Mr Lefroy said the bright spot was an increase in pulse plantings and as a result, the fall in yield would be just four per cent on the five-year average.

                        "So really the pulse prices at the moment, chick peas and lentils in the east are really incentivising growers to put more hectares in," he said.

                        Mr Lefroy said for the other bulk commodities, the decrease in supply was positive news for prices.

                        "Really driving basis, particularly in wheat has been local supply availability," he said.

                        "So in north eastern states such as Queensland and also New South Wales, local basis have been really quite strong and prices have remained really quite strong.

                        "To the point where we've actually seen some inter-state grain movements from South Australia and Victoria head to those states to supply the feed demand up there."

                        Mr Lefroy said prices started high in Western Australia but had dipped to reflect the boost in yields towards the end of the season.

                        "Basis was really quite strong heading through June and July but then flattened off in October once the season got better," he said.

                        "So the outlook for wheat price in particular locally, will depend a lot on that local supply story and how harvest plays out."

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Saw a Broker's posted feed wheat trades made at $5.20 to $5.30 a bushel.... a local fellow who contracted half his wheat for $7/bu to a terminal at about 14% Px and delivered well under that is being discounted to under six dollars a bushel! Remember I said half his wheat.... he blended to large bins into one sample and is hoping the undelivered bin has enough HIGH protein to increase the average on the delivered stuff. I think he handled it poorly.... two bins, each off different fields? Topography and previous crop might be making a difference in Px values!

                          Long story to make the point good feed wheat and low Px milling wheat spread sucks.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            Thanks for the update Mallee

                            I wonder why the Aus growers would increase Pulse acres with prices dropping and massive stocks on the prairies(canada). When and they will, move into the market place prices will drop further. The Canadian quality is top notch. I would expect pricing in both countries to drop further, and movement slow. The “Russian” entry into pulses might further keep prices low if the big exporters in that country convince the farms to grow large acreage again - only to sell at even lower prices = lower Canadian and Aus prices

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Wheat no longer boring, up 49 cents since Oct 31!

                              Comment

                              • Reply to this Thread
                              • Return to Topic List
                              Working...
                              X

                              This website uses tracking tools, including cookies. We use these technologies for a variety of reasons, including to recognize new and past website users, to customize your experience, perform analytics and deliver personalized advertising on our sites, apps and newsletters and across the Internet based on your interests.
                              You agree to our and by clicking I agree.