I can get 12.59 for canola oct first delivery. Should a guy take it or hold on. Lots of bills coming due by then. Canola is in swath looks ok.
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Will let others answer.
Your price equates to about $555/tonne or depending when you got the bid, a basis of about $20 to $30/tonne under November futures.
Here is the chart. November futures have spent the last week in the $575 to $585/tonne range. When it breaks out were will it go.
[URL="http://farms.com/FarmsPages/Markets/tabid/214/Default.aspx?page=chart&sym=RSX11"]Nov canola chart[/URL]
Next USDA report will have to be watched. Lots of weather getting built into futures prices. I like the expression "Buy the rumor, sell the fact".
Can you get a sniff at something closer to $13/bu? Others can comment. For cash flow sales, my finger would be itchy on the pricing trigger. Does the grain company you deal with have a reputation for taking canola within their delivery commitment period? Lots of conversations with farmers these days about canola when they are sitting in elevator lineups waiting to unload.
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CDN $ up cmpared to USD$ that has an effect on the net price we get. Also ressesion on our doorstep . Group of 8 ,20 must be nervous . Housing market in the states about hit a second go round. We have not heard the last of the deregulated financial twister headed our way.
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A person has to do the math. What is the yeild? 20 bu/ac X $12.59= $251.80/acre gross. Canola costs approx $250.00/acre to grow (I am guessing this is full cost of production). Anything over that yeild, at that price, if you sell the canola, is profit.
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