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    #16
    Sold most of next years barley production with "Act of God" for what will work out to about $5.65/ bushel at my farm.

    This is the same U.S. maltster who's current price is less than last year, but then again the price is down from the time I made the contract last year. Not as much as the market dropped from that time, but there is no middleman taking their cut anymore either.

    Canadian Maltsters may take a year or two to realize they don't have the limitless supply of cheap barley anymore, no matter how they treat the farmers who supply them. I've heard there are already improvements happening, but they've still lost me for 2012.

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      #17
      Sold a few (8-9%) beans at $12.10 cash.

      Comment


        #18
        Ifn the price is down on malt next year,
        bet yer locked in acta godly clause won't
        make a bitta difference, cousin yer grain
        unfortunately won't meat their high, high,
        higher quality specs. Seen it happen
        before, they got away wit it cousin only
        snivelin and whinning ensued..... Nothin
        ta stop the crooks in the market. Am I
        right er am I wrong??????????

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          #19
          What specs do you have to meet Ranger?
          I would be temped to switch all my soft wheat acres to barley if I can get that price, I suppose my transport will be higher than yours. If the specs are only protien and germ and plumpness, then sounds like a good contract.

          Comment


            #20
            Do you bag your malt?

            Comment


              #21
              Burbert
              Burbert you are right. Are where was your god damned board to
              protect farmers. If they cant or wont help the farmer get the
              hell out of the way. At least now there should be some
              accountability with what happens in the malt industry. There are
              only two people who can be at fault now, no passing the buck
              anymore. If we have a disagreement on malt the tests go to a
              third independent party for final results. And if we still have
              a disagreement everything is in writing and we can get the
              courts involved or take our business elsewhere.

              I really hope that now the board is gone our customers(maltsers)
              can be treated as our partners and not our enemies which seems
              to be the board and the small minded way.

              Comment


                #22
                Re: what Burbert is trying to explain. If anyone thinks what he is saying can't or won't happen, they are only fooling themselves. This is not a pessimistic view just a realistic view. Your customer is always right, even when they are wrong. Don't forget who is making out the cheque.

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                  #23
                  Hopperbin, only protien germ and plumpness. No
                  bags, just air floor bins.
                  Had over 1% wheat in 2011 (even with clean
                  canola last year and wheat 2 years ago!!), but
                  they still accepted it. It was pleasant to deal with
                  someone who actually tried to make the deal work
                  anyway.

                  Comment


                    #24
                    Farmranger; would you mind saying what region you're in roughly??
                    It would help me get an idea if my price offering is fair given freight.
                    Talked to Malteurop rep from GFalls at a meeting, but my freight would make price same as my local CMalt.
                    Curious as to your buyer but of course thats your business.

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                      #25
                      I well remember what Burbert is talking about. Even now the contracts we are signing are legal ass wipe.
                      A reasonably clear hedging method for both partys would help. And I have to think at least now it has a chance to develop.
                      Someday hope to see a malt contract as airtight as a canola one. That may be the only way to clean the companys up?

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                        #26
                        Lethbridge area. I think there are limited tonnes. I renewed a while back for the same tonnes as last year, but unfortunately couldn't increase it any. Freight is quite a bit for me too, but still beats what I'd make from what the Canadian Maltsters have been offering.

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                          #27
                          Our 'Act of God' is on first 20 bu. only. After that $75/t penalty for non delivery.

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                            #28
                            That doesn't sound right? Are you sure the non-
                            delivery isn't on the 1st 20 bushels you produce?
                            At any rate, it still sucks if the quality isn't there at
                            harvest time. I wouldn't sign that contract
                            blackpowder; at least not very many bushels,
                            unless there was one heck of a premium for doing
                            so, but that's just me.

                            Comment


                              #29
                              Blackpowder. I assume you are talking about the contract through
                              Canada Malt. The $75 is the penalty if you price anything over
                              the AOG and fail to deliver. The guy at Canada malt told me that
                              they hope to never charge that $75/tonne penalty if a person pays
                              the difference in malt prices(but I take that with a grain of
                              salt). Which is still an unreasonable penalty IMO. But they do
                              base there contracts off the MGE dec wheat futures so with them it
                              is possible to hedge the grain without pricing it through them.
                              The big problem with this set up is that the wheat futures are
                              only very loosely correlated to malt prices, but at least there is
                              some mechanism to hedge your price, without pricing it through
                              them and still being guaranteeing delivery.

                              So the long and short of it is that these contracts are far from
                              perfect but are better than what we have had in the past, IMO.
                              But that being said I only sighed up a couple hundred acres to
                              test the waters. I might also add one of the benefits that I
                              liked about going through them is that they let you sign up barley
                              other than metcalfe, namely Meredith, Newdale and Copeland, all of
                              which give you at least a 10 bu/acre yield boost with out the
                              disease.

                              Comment


                                #30
                                Assumptions correct.
                                It's still a shell game for us, but I believe a little clearer and will further improve.
                                Properly hedging risk has been difficult for both partys. Should that get better these BS contracts will disappear.

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