Just a note to highlight changes the way the CWB will be handling CWB contracts/buying feed barley. See:
http://www.cwb.ca/en/news/releases/2004/080904.jsp
Changes to feed barley.
1) Two pooling periods in a crop year.
2) Only guaranteed delivery contracts.
3) Ability to cash purchase.
A crummy international price is still a crummy international price. Todays PRO of $127/t in Vancouver ($80/t in Alberta) is an accurate signal of Saudi business. Still no deliveries to the CWB under this scenario. What will be interesting to the cattle industry is their ability (if they choose) buy from the cash market to satisfy specific sales. Will come from the grain companies via tendering as the CWB does not have the ability to go direct.
Also hearing of some frost in North East Alberta. Hopefully mother nature doesn't hammer us with an early frost.
http://www.cwb.ca/en/news/releases/2004/080904.jsp
Changes to feed barley.
1) Two pooling periods in a crop year.
2) Only guaranteed delivery contracts.
3) Ability to cash purchase.
A crummy international price is still a crummy international price. Todays PRO of $127/t in Vancouver ($80/t in Alberta) is an accurate signal of Saudi business. Still no deliveries to the CWB under this scenario. What will be interesting to the cattle industry is their ability (if they choose) buy from the cash market to satisfy specific sales. Will come from the grain companies via tendering as the CWB does not have the ability to go direct.
Also hearing of some frost in North East Alberta. Hopefully mother nature doesn't hammer us with an early frost.
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