AGRIWEEK Dec. 14:
Salesmen & boys
U.S. exporters have little trouble selling durum
The Canadian Wheat Board has had nothing but bad news for western durum growers for months. There is a record Canadian supply for 2009-10, mainly because the Board’s projected prices published monthly last winter and spring encouraged farmers to seed more acres than they should have. There was a large carry-in from 2008-09 and a surprisingly good crop in 2009. For the current crop year there are 7.24 million tonnes of durum wheat to dispose of, compared to 6.34 in 2008-09. Canadian exports in the crop year to Nov. 29 reached 981,000 tonnes, 4% behind the year-ago rate.
The U.S. durum harvest for 2009 was 109 million bushels (2.97 million tonnes), up from last season’s 84 million (2.28). Since the start of the U.S. crop year June 1, American exports are 880,000 tonnes, 136% higher than 372,000 to the same point a year ago. Six months into the crop year they are 70% of the agriculture department’s projection for the full year.
American (and possibly other) private exporters are making sales into some of the Wheat Board’s most important markets. Italy, which had a short domestic crop, has bought 299,000 tonnes of U.S. durum in the last six months compared to 186,000 from the Wheat Board in the last four months. U.S. marketers have sold 167,000 tonnes to Algeria, up from 20,000 for the same period last year, while the Wheat Board has shipped 29,000 tonnes compared to 198,000. Morocco has taken 73,000 tonnes of U.S. durum compared to none a year ago, and 112,000 from the Wheat Board compared to 69,000 a year ago. U.S. sales to North African countries, which represent the biggest single export region, in the year to date total 389,000 tonnes compared to the Board’s 141,000. The latest USDA weekly export sales report shows 23,000 tonnes of American durum wheat sold to Canada.
Meanwhile the Wheat Board has sold 99,000 tonnes of durum to U.S. buyers compared to 69,500 a year ago. If U.S. exports maintain the pace for the rest of their crop year total use will be about 15 million bushels higher than predicted, cutting carryover to just above 30 million bushels, compared to 25 million at the end of 2008-09. If American exporters do at all better, they will have to buy durum from the Wheat Board to fill their orders. Possibly they are already doing it, because American durum growers have been reluctant sellers.
It might even be cheaper for Amer-ican durum exporters to get their export inventory from the Board than from North Dakota farmers. The average farm-gate price in North Dakota last week was $5.66 a bushel, or $219 a tonne Canadian. The Board’s latest pool return price for the 2009-10 crop year in Saskatchewan, after elevator and freight deductions, is $166. With $53 a tonne to work with, the Board could sell in the U.S. at the farmer price and still beat the price it said it would pay to western producers.
The durum situation is a scandal of incompetence at the Board. The Commons agriculture committee should be investigating it, in the name of holding the Harper government to account. However to the Liberal, NDP and Bloc majority on the committee the Board cannot possibly do any wrong.
Salesmen & boys
U.S. exporters have little trouble selling durum
The Canadian Wheat Board has had nothing but bad news for western durum growers for months. There is a record Canadian supply for 2009-10, mainly because the Board’s projected prices published monthly last winter and spring encouraged farmers to seed more acres than they should have. There was a large carry-in from 2008-09 and a surprisingly good crop in 2009. For the current crop year there are 7.24 million tonnes of durum wheat to dispose of, compared to 6.34 in 2008-09. Canadian exports in the crop year to Nov. 29 reached 981,000 tonnes, 4% behind the year-ago rate.
The U.S. durum harvest for 2009 was 109 million bushels (2.97 million tonnes), up from last season’s 84 million (2.28). Since the start of the U.S. crop year June 1, American exports are 880,000 tonnes, 136% higher than 372,000 to the same point a year ago. Six months into the crop year they are 70% of the agriculture department’s projection for the full year.
American (and possibly other) private exporters are making sales into some of the Wheat Board’s most important markets. Italy, which had a short domestic crop, has bought 299,000 tonnes of U.S. durum in the last six months compared to 186,000 from the Wheat Board in the last four months. U.S. marketers have sold 167,000 tonnes to Algeria, up from 20,000 for the same period last year, while the Wheat Board has shipped 29,000 tonnes compared to 198,000. Morocco has taken 73,000 tonnes of U.S. durum compared to none a year ago, and 112,000 from the Wheat Board compared to 69,000 a year ago. U.S. sales to North African countries, which represent the biggest single export region, in the year to date total 389,000 tonnes compared to the Board’s 141,000. The latest USDA weekly export sales report shows 23,000 tonnes of American durum wheat sold to Canada.
Meanwhile the Wheat Board has sold 99,000 tonnes of durum to U.S. buyers compared to 69,500 a year ago. If U.S. exports maintain the pace for the rest of their crop year total use will be about 15 million bushels higher than predicted, cutting carryover to just above 30 million bushels, compared to 25 million at the end of 2008-09. If American exporters do at all better, they will have to buy durum from the Wheat Board to fill their orders. Possibly they are already doing it, because American durum growers have been reluctant sellers.
It might even be cheaper for Amer-ican durum exporters to get their export inventory from the Board than from North Dakota farmers. The average farm-gate price in North Dakota last week was $5.66 a bushel, or $219 a tonne Canadian. The Board’s latest pool return price for the 2009-10 crop year in Saskatchewan, after elevator and freight deductions, is $166. With $53 a tonne to work with, the Board could sell in the U.S. at the farmer price and still beat the price it said it would pay to western producers.
The durum situation is a scandal of incompetence at the Board. The Commons agriculture committee should be investigating it, in the name of holding the Harper government to account. However to the Liberal, NDP and Bloc majority on the committee the Board cannot possibly do any wrong.
Comment