Hopperbin . . . some growers started
placing March Chicago wheat put option
bear spreads last fall. Some placed a
$7.50 to $6.50 spread on, some did a $7
to $6 bear spread and so on. But these
spreads have since expired but provided
gains from a drop in the market through
winter. Positions allowed growers 3 to 4
months of downward price protection.
Some have now positioned themselves with
July to October bear spreads for further
protection. The problem with wheat
spreads is they can be expensive and
economically a grower can only go out 3
or 4 months affordably. This is a
problem with wheat. Corn is more
flexible and less expensive. Growers can
protect themselves up to a year ahead in
corn for reasonable money.
For the growers that stuck to a
disciplined marketing plan with wheat,
it has been beneficial as higher fall
prices have been guarded.
But like cottonpicken stated, the wheat
market looks like its bottoming right
now. A grower with bear spreads might
decide to jump ship. But from a farm
management point of view, it may be good
to hold this protection as India is now
exporting and the Americans appear to
have a solid start to their winter
wheat crop.
Some growers have just shorted the
futures ion Minneapolis and Chicago, but
you have to be able to stomach margin
calls from your broker. It's just a fact
of life in the hedging world.
Hope this helps . . . .
Errol
placing March Chicago wheat put option
bear spreads last fall. Some placed a
$7.50 to $6.50 spread on, some did a $7
to $6 bear spread and so on. But these
spreads have since expired but provided
gains from a drop in the market through
winter. Positions allowed growers 3 to 4
months of downward price protection.
Some have now positioned themselves with
July to October bear spreads for further
protection. The problem with wheat
spreads is they can be expensive and
economically a grower can only go out 3
or 4 months affordably. This is a
problem with wheat. Corn is more
flexible and less expensive. Growers can
protect themselves up to a year ahead in
corn for reasonable money.
For the growers that stuck to a
disciplined marketing plan with wheat,
it has been beneficial as higher fall
prices have been guarded.
But like cottonpicken stated, the wheat
market looks like its bottoming right
now. A grower with bear spreads might
decide to jump ship. But from a farm
management point of view, it may be good
to hold this protection as India is now
exporting and the Americans appear to
have a solid start to their winter
wheat crop.
Some growers have just shorted the
futures ion Minneapolis and Chicago, but
you have to be able to stomach margin
calls from your broker. It's just a fact
of life in the hedging world.
Hope this helps . . . .
Errol
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