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roll canola March basis or not?

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    #11
    "Sell the Canola", just so you can play in the futures/options market? And how does this practice do farmers, as a whole, any good? The ****ing canola is gone, in the hands of those who no longer need to come to the market, then why should it ever rally... Please tell me I'm wrong and point out where. Because of my ignorance, I may not be seeing the whole picture...

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      #12
      .......crickets

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        #13
        You are bang on, the system is for billionaires not us.

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          #14
          aFarmin,

          You Wont Get an Answer Outta The Likes of Charliepee, error, Dape, er' Others!!!!!! They Dont Work fer You and No You Cant Sit With Them and No You Cant Hit The Blunt!!!!!!!!

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            #15
            Maybe its such a stupid analysis of the solution it doesn't warrant a response?

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              #16
              Or maybe we have other things to do...

              The most effective marketing strategy separates basis and futures - two different markets, driven by different factors, so they should be acted on separately. As a seller, when you're deciding on flat price (futures), you can execute by pricing your cash grain or by selling futures directly.

              The question was why sell cash grain and buy futures. The only reason in my book is because you have to deliver your grain - say it's on a basis contract that can't be rolled - and you want to stay exposed to the market as a long. Make no mistake, it's speculating. You're taking on risk.

              To say the futures market won't rally because you've given the buyer all your canola doesn't make sense. Even if all buyers were covered, there are many other factors driving futures.

              Now - if you meant basis wouldn't rally because the buyers in your area are covered, you'd be right. We're seeing that right now - average canola basis for Jan delivery is 30 under. For Apr delivery it's about 18 under. Seems everyone is covered nearby and the price (basis) reflects that.

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                #17
                Thank you John.

                So if the actual crushers or commodity traders are covered and don't need the futures for price discovery, who else is left? Speculators? And I realize the rest of the players other than those who actually need/use the canola can sway prices with their activity in the market.

                Seems to me that all the pricing options are still available through terminals but spot pricing has become quite elusive. They either want target pricing contracts used or if your into basis/futures first to use them. But a basic futures less basis any day of the week can be elusive. I don't even mind deferred delivery if the price is what your satisfied with.

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                  #18
                  Yes there are speculators but others too. Many specs and funds are arbitrageurs - they trade when relationships get out of whack. Canola/beans, canola/bean oil, I've even know guys to trade canola vs winter wheat. The relationships that people trade is almost endless.
                  Also - even if crushers and traders are covered, they will trade spreads.

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                    #19
                    Im tryimg to understand and train myself as to the correct use of basis.
                    Often I think we use/think of it incorrectly. Perhaps it should only be locked when u need to secure delivery at a certain time. Otherwise its merely a demand signal. ??

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                      #20
                      Basis is the price the buyer is willing to pay, given the current market factors.
                      If he's running low and needs to boost stocks (attract sales/deliveries) he raises his price (basis).
                      If he's comfortable with what he has instore and to come on contracts, he lowers his price.

                      If futures rally and pushes prices to prices he knows are attractive (like $10 canola), he will drop his basis (to pay only as much as he needs to).

                      Bottom line - basis is a price.

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