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FYI Durum politics

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    #13
    Thanks, Charlie, good info. Can the market handle the
    anticipated increase in Canola acres and doesn't palm
    oil factor in anymore? Someone mentioned that rye
    was worthless, but it was fetching 5 to 5.50 last fall in
    this area. This spring is setting up like the perfect
    storm for just about every commodity. I'd really watch
    the input side and not get carried away on a spending
    spree. Also, I predict five to six weeks of cool and wet
    weather hampering seeding.
    Rockpile

    Comment


      #14
      Canola is obviously impacted by world vegetable oil fundamentals.

      Vegetable oils are being driven by increasing consumption (both
      human and biofuels). Canola is able to participate in this as well as
      appealing to North America and world demand for healthy oils
      (lower trans fats and saturated fats). There will not be an issue in
      selling all the canola Canada produces.

      Having 60 to 70 percent market share in a crop like durum doesn't
      mean anyone including the CWB can manipulate prices. USDA is
      changing programs to move what amounts to a small percentage
      of spring wheat acres to durum in the Dakotas - impact is to force
      Canada to look for off markets. Canada is a residual supplier to
      North Africa to fill in the gap after their using their domestic
      production.

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        #15
        As a point of reference, the posted county price in Ward county (Minot) is $3.37/bu. New Crop loan is $6.08. Don't know what the PCP will be at new crop but if the $3.37 were to hold the durum farmer is looking at a $2.51/bu cheque in hand. Last year the USDA spent $106 million on durum LDP's at an average of $1.20/bushel. You can bet US farmers will be hitting any bid they can at harvest, pocket the LDP and move durum to market and keep farm space for other crops.

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          #16
          I note that loan deficiency payments are not directly tied to how
          a US farmer markets their grain. Durum sold in the fall could
          be forward priced, sold off the combine at the daily price or
          stored into the winter/spring. LDP is simply a calculation and
          payout.

          What has more impact on prices? The monstrous carryover of
          durum as a result of the CWB deciding to hold durum off the
          market for the past 2 years or an extra 200,000 to 600,000
          tonnes of US durum as a result of the loan rate. The unknowns
          in tomorrow's Stats Can seeded acreage forecast will be way
          bigger than the above let alone including weather uncertainty.
          The issue at the present time is there is more durum that
          markets at the current price.

          Comment


            #17
            Charlie is right in that the only stipulation is that the farmer have "beneficial" interest in the durum. That being said, a $6.08 loan will encourage more off combine selling than would normally be the case. The extra 200,000-600,000 in and of itself may not be a big deal, but the $6.08 doesn't just apply to that. Also - you can bet any buyer is simply going to pull/lower the bid given this news, whether it's for Canadian durum / US / Mexican / local.

            Stats Canada's durum report better have acres down at least 25% which is probably about 4.2-4.4 million. Better that it be down under 4. If it's not under 4.5 then there's a problem.

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