What do you make of this CME comment yesterday...
"The expected bonanza could become a bust, at least for farmers, who aren't receiving cash prices equal to futures prices because investors won't execute their contracts. Investors are content to roll their contracts forward to the December contract for a few extra cents of profit. The result: Farmers are receiving prices for wheat about $1 below futures prices across the Plains States.
Elevators, which store and market grain, are reluctant to take delivery because if the grain goes into storage and it is committed to futures then they have tied up capacity that won't be free for months. In response, operators are offering farmers cash prices of only $6 to $6.50 to discourage deliveries.
For example, on Aug. 31, elevators in Salina, Abilene and Wichita, all of which are in Kansas, took delivery on 471 futures contracts covering about 2.3 million bushels of wheat for September delivery, according to Kansas City Board of Trade delivery data. The contracts were held on behalf of customers by six firms: ADM Investor Services, Country Hedging Inc., JP Morgan Futures, MF Global Inc., Newedge USA LLC, and Penson GH Co.
The next day, all 471 contracts were "re-intentioned," meaning the contracts were resold on the futures market. The grain, now in storage in Salina and elsewhere, will stay there until those contracts expire, which won't be before December."
"The expected bonanza could become a bust, at least for farmers, who aren't receiving cash prices equal to futures prices because investors won't execute their contracts. Investors are content to roll their contracts forward to the December contract for a few extra cents of profit. The result: Farmers are receiving prices for wheat about $1 below futures prices across the Plains States.
Elevators, which store and market grain, are reluctant to take delivery because if the grain goes into storage and it is committed to futures then they have tied up capacity that won't be free for months. In response, operators are offering farmers cash prices of only $6 to $6.50 to discourage deliveries.
For example, on Aug. 31, elevators in Salina, Abilene and Wichita, all of which are in Kansas, took delivery on 471 futures contracts covering about 2.3 million bushels of wheat for September delivery, according to Kansas City Board of Trade delivery data. The contracts were held on behalf of customers by six firms: ADM Investor Services, Country Hedging Inc., JP Morgan Futures, MF Global Inc., Newedge USA LLC, and Penson GH Co.
The next day, all 471 contracts were "re-intentioned," meaning the contracts were resold on the futures market. The grain, now in storage in Salina and elsewhere, will stay there until those contracts expire, which won't be before December."
Comment