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Low wheat prices 16 months ago, as Low as $1 per bushel in Texas

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    Low wheat prices 16 months ago, as Low as $1 per bushel in Texas

    SAN ANGELO, Texas — As West Texas wheat farmers celebrate the first bumper crop in years, their moods suddenly turn gloomy when reaching the elevators with harvested grain and receive the latest price quotes. Friday’s daily cash market wheat price closed at $2.70 per bushel.

    “I can’t believe we are getting 1970 prices in 2010. It is very heartbreaking to see the best crop ever be priced as low as it is,” said Barbara Hoffman of Paint Rock, 30 miles east of San Angelo.

    David Holubec, who farms near Melvin, about 60 miles southeast of San Angelo, says farmers need at least $5 to $6 per bushel just to break even.

    “The bottom line is our buyers are looking for a 12 percent protein content and most of the wheat in West Texas is averaging 11 percent or below,” said Jason Jacoby, a stock farmer and owner of Jacoby Feed & Seed at Melvin. “If the protein is 11 percent or below, they are discounting it anywhere from 50 cents to 60 cents per bushel.”

    To get 50-bushel wheat cut, the cost starting from the combine to delivery at a grain elevator is approximately 72 cents per bushel for the farmer, Jacoby said. As a result, some stockfarmers in Concho and McCulloch counties have decided to leave their crop in the fields rather then lose more money by hiring a custom farm operator and to truck harvested grain to grain elevators.

    More than 60 percent of the wheat has been harvested in the Melvin and Salt Gap areas near the Concho-McCulloch county line. The yields are averaging from 40 bushels to 50 bushels per acre with test weights running 62-63 pounds per bushel, Jacoby said.

    At least 70 percent of the wheat has been harvested in southwest Runnels County and northern parts of Tom Green and Concho counties serviced by Kasberg Grain Co. in Miles, 17 miles northeast of San Angelo.

    “The quality of this wheat is good, but the price is horrible,” said Eugene Kasberg Jr. “We are paying $2.80 per bushel today (Monday).”

    Dryland wheat — crops that depend solely on rainfall — in Jones County has average yields ranging from 30 bushels to 40 bushels per acre this season, said Weldon Rainwater, a farmer and manager of Radium Gin at Anson, about 25 miles northwest of Abilene.

    “The wheat futures price (July bearish at $4.35) are way up there in comparison, but the local prices are killing the farmer,” Rainwater said. “The prices dropped as low as $1 per bushel at some elevators in the Big Country around Abilene.”

    J.W. “Dub” Vinson, a wheat farmer in Taylor County and also in the brokerage business for 32 years, predicted in early May that a record yield would drive the price down.

    “Although this wheat crop stands to have a high yield, the protein is not high in an outstanding crop,” Vinson told me during a visit to his Abilene Ag Service and Supply. “Wheat with low protein will hurt the price. If the crop contains a high protein percentage, there will be a greater demand for it.”

    Jacoby attributes the protein problem to the weather trends in different areas. “One wheat field may be one thing and the next field is different, depending on when and how much it rained,” he said.

    “The rail cars we loaded with wheat on Friday went 11.7625 percent protein content, while we loaded wheat harvested at Mereta (19 miles east of San Angelo) on Monday that ran right at 12 percent protein.”

    The Jacoby firm is trucking grain from the elevators at Melvin about 15 miles east to Brady, which has just completed a rail center, a spur in the western part of town that feeds into the American Railroads downtown.

    “We are loading from 12 to 20 rail cars per day at the Brady outlet,” Jacoby said.

    There is a shortage of rail cars on several short lines. Only 40 percent of the rail cars ordered from Texas-Pacifico have been delivered to Kasberg Grain Co. in Miles.

    “We are forced to shut down every day after we fill every rail car here,” said Kasberg.

    Extra rail cars were ordered by Abilene Ag this year in anticipation of the larger wheat harvest. The firm finished a new grain elevator that is state of the art, just in time for this year’s crop.

    Most of the wheat in the Concho Valley and Big Country is shipped to the Gulf Coast ports — Houston, Galveston, Corpus Christi and Beaumont.

    Jerry Lackey writes about agriculture. Contact him at jlackey@wcc.net or 325-949-2291.

    © 2010 San Angelo Standard Times. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    #2
    Your post is absolutely so screwed up. One dollar wheat?

    Comment


      #3
      “The wheat futures price (July bearish at $4.35) are way up there in comparison, but the local prices are killing the farmer,” Rainwater said. “The prices dropped as low as $1 per bushel at some elevators in the Big Country around Abilene.”


      Nobody needs to listen to this bullshit

      Comment


        #4
        That would be July 2010.
        What were HRW futures then?
        What would the basis be in Texas?
        Short distance to port!

        Comment


          #5
          Texas Business reports: College Station—Wildfires continued to breakout in many areas, but even without fires wheat farmers were feeling burned, according to Texas AgriLife Extension Service personnel.

          With dry conditions, heat and wind, the crop continues to deteriorate, according to Mark Welch, AgriLife Extension economist specializing in grain marketing and policy.

          “It’s bad and getting worse,” Welch said. “It looks like the 2011 crop, in terms of production and yields, is going to look like the 2009 crop — perhaps even as bad as the 2006 crop; just disastrous wheat years in Texas.”

          This year’s poor crop comes on the heels of a bumper crop in 2011. Also, wheat prices are at record highs, he said. “This year’s crop condition ratings show about 40 percent of the Texas crop in very poor condition, which compares with 65 percent very poor in March of 2006 and 53 percent very poor in May of 2009.”

          Prices are record highs Wouldnt know that under the CWB.

          Comment


            #6
            OH yea that was an article from OCT 19, 10 days ago. RECORD WHEAT PRICES!!!!!!!!!!!! WTF.

            Comment


              #7
              Remember this:The prime ingredient in flour is wheat, which these days is acting more like oil – rising sharply on commodities exchanges. On Monday, the price of March spring wheat on the Minneapolis Grain Exchange shot up to $24 a bushel, the highest price ever. Within the past month, the price of some types of wheat has risen over 90 percent. Already, agricultural experts say, it's getting hard to find the type of wheat used to make pasta, noodles, pizza, and bagels.

              The CWB really cashed in on this!!! NOT.

              Comment


                #8
                IF finally got out of his tent in occupy Winnipeg to
                post some two year old data big deal ! Anyone
                with a brain knows prices go up and down in the
                real world at the board it's down all the time .
                Get back to your tent IF you must have some
                other losers to talk to .

                Comment


                  #9
                  This is from Yesterday:The amount of grain stored by governments— a good measure of the global cushion against poor harvests and rising prices—continues to decline. Global cereal stocks were expected to stand at 318 million tons by the close of the 2007 season, equivalent to about 14 percent of annual consumption.25 (See Figure 3.) These stocks, and the stock-to-use ratio, built up by bumper crops in the 1980s and the late 1990s, are now substantially below their all-time high.26

                  Despite the record harvest, the low stocks and strong demand combined to push prices of all cereals to new highs.27 At harvest time, the U.S. corn export price was up about 70 percent from the previous year, while the American hard wheat price averaged 65 percent more than a year earlier.28 Wheat prices in Argentina, another major exporter, doubled since 2006.29 Important wheat exporters like Ukraine and Russia have imposed export restrictions to ensure a sufficient domestic supply.30 Major importers, like Egypt, the European Union, Yemen, and Iraq, have reacted to high prices by purchasing grain early, which has further tightened supplies and boosted prices.31

                  REST MY CASE.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Oh scarry scarry, Read the 2009 comments. Telling farmers the world has lots of HRS so don't seed winter wheat. AH market gives a signal not to grow a crop.

                    Comment


                      #11
                      that was june 2010, when wheat was rock bottom.
                      as usual, buyers collude to steal wheat from cash strapped farmers

                      Comment


                        #12
                        [URL="http://farms.com/FarmsPages/Markets/tabid/214/Default.aspx?page=chart&sym=KEZ11&domain=farms&stu dies=Volume;&cancelstudy=&a=M"]KCBT monthly[/URL]

                        <a href="http://www.cwb.ca/db/contracts/ppo/ppo_prices.nsf/fixed_price/fbpc-wheat-2010-khrw-20100701.html">July 1 CWRW FPC</a>

                        <a href ="http://www.ers.usda.gov/data/wheat/YBtable18.asp">average farm price winter wheat</a>

                        Comment


                          #13
                          Well well well, that explains then where the cwb sold our wheat and why the initial price was as shitty as it is and was! lol when the world price was 10 times higher. lol

                          Have to admit you guys are outstanding at finding the lowest price, when the directors are out of work it'll look good on the job application at Zellers! lol

                          Comment


                            #14
                            [URL="http://www.cwb.ca/public/en/farmers/producer/historical/pdf/2010-11/2010-11fpcbpccharts.pdf"]chart 10[/URL]

                            Comment


                              #15
                              This is so scary. It must be Halloween. Tonight you should all dress up like a Viterra or maybe a Louis Dreyfus and pillage the rural economy. Go to farm houses and offer nothing for their treats. Be careful though as the CWB police are still around looking for more to put in jail.

                              Comment

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