• You will need to login or register before you can post a message. If you already have an Agriville account login by clicking the login icon on the top right corner of the page. If you are a new user you will need to Register.

Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Good Article, Farmers are concerned!

Collapse
X
Collapse
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

    Good Article, Farmers are concerned!

    Beginning last summer when buyers from
    Japan and Egypt bypassed US wheat and
    bought from Russia and countries
    surrounding Russia, reports since then
    have grown week after week that too much
    wheat has been sold and eventually
    buyers will have to come back to North
    America for wheat. I am not saying it
    can't happen, but for now it is simply
    speculation it MIGHT happen.

    As recently as a week ago the Ukraine
    Agricultural Ministry announced it had
    met sanitary requirements of China to
    export corn. It met the requirements due
    to a three billion dollar loan from
    China. Shipments of corn to China are
    expected before the end of the year.
    Would China loan three billion dollars
    if they thought corn wasn't available?
    Of course they wouldn't.

    It is also obvious wheat growers from
    the southern Plains to the northern
    Plains and wheat growing mountain states
    and all the way to the major wheat
    growing areas in Canada have stored
    wheat. Over the past couple of weeks, I
    have heard from wheat producers and
    traders from the US as well
    Saskatchewan, Alberta, Australia and
    South Africa and all have wheat.
    Essentially, they repeated the reports
    claiming wheat has been oversold and
    with the price drop since the last USDA
    report, want to know when to expect a
    rally.

    Has wheat, along with old crop grains in
    South America, been oversold? Or is it
    more likely those buyers took advantage
    of great prices and buyers willing to
    take it. Reports often showed how
    grains, where it was being sold were
    priced significantly cheaper, but
    compared to current prices now the sales
    look very good.

    As I have said many times, estimating
    crop yields and crop production for 2012
    is next to impossible. Throughout the
    past summer with all the reports on the
    drought it would have been easy to
    believe the US would have little if any
    crops. Reports grew month by month that
    the Russian crops were suffering just as
    bad. Reports in July and August implied
    Russia would need to keep corn and wheat
    they were growing. But they didn't. Why?

    Very little mention has been given to
    the acreage planted. The drought did
    devastate crops in many areas of the US,
    but it must be remembered the US started
    out with close to 96 million acres of
    corn. Reports in June estimated China
    planted 3 to 4 percent more acres. Why
    haven't reports talked about the
    increased growth just about any place
    grain could and is grown? If you want a
    safe bet, it has to be in 2013 worldwide
    grain acreage, which will increase as
    fast as planters can push seeds into the
    ground.

    Grain needs are down because livestock
    production has dropped in the US.
    Sometimes I feel alone when I report US
    cattle will drop the need for feed in
    the US. Why is it so hard to connect the
    dots when the last Cattle on Feed Report
    estimated 18.8% less cattle were placed
    in September? Almost half of the
    breeding herd was killed in 2011 in the
    Plains and Southwest.

    For all the talk that Brazil and
    Argentina are running out of grain, it
    has to be remembered the grain being
    sold is their 2012 old crop grain. It
    is not unusual for Argentina or Brazil
    to sell grain before new crop has been
    planted. Storing grain in South America
    is unusual.

    According to Celeres, one of the
    largest, if not the largest analytical
    consulting firm in Brazil as of November
    9th said soybean sales for the new crop
    are at 49 percent. Last year at this
    time 36 percent was sold. Brazilian
    farmers have been taking advantage of
    higher than usual contracting prices. If
    Brazil plants the predicted amount of
    acres, it will become the largest
    soybean growing country passing the US.

    In the past week, reports thrive upon
    the possibility international buying
    will bring grain prices back to and
    above summer highs. Most are based on
    the heavy sales from Europe and South
    America and the need to increase
    purchases from the US. Why is it so
    hard to see with the strength in the US
    dollar compared to Brazil, buyers bought
    where the best price was offered.
    Southeast US livestock and poultry
    producers took advantage
    of the currency exchange rates. Is it
    that hard to believe exchange rates have
    changed in the past year?

    Some facts...

    Already the US beef herd is at a 60 year
    low and will continue to drop in 2013 as
    the liquidation of the breeding herd in
    2011 further drops the availability of
    calves. On top of the fewer cattle,
    projected corn production was raised 19
    million bushels with sorghum production
    up 4 million bushels. The US is also
    importing more corn. The USDA is also
    forecasting a record for U.S. corn
    imports of 100 million bushels. It is a
    gigantic leap when compared to imports
    of 28 and 29 million bushels in 2010 and
    2011. Corn ending stocks are expected to
    be 28 million higher. If the USDA
    counted dried distiller grains and corn
    gluten into feed use, on 5.5 billion
    bushels used for ethanol, DDGs in 2012
    would add 1.7 billion bushels to feed.

    Corn exports are down. China has
    repeatedly said for 2012/2013 it will
    export possibly 5 percent of its needs.
    Corn production in China, according to
    the USDA, is growing 200 million metric
    tons or 7.874 billion bushels up over
    4.2 percent in 2011 and 11.5 percent
    more compared to 2010. The US Attaché in
    China has said the corn imported will go
    for China's strategic reserves.

    For months I have been pushing grain
    producers to sell. Along with the
    fundamentals, technically, I see markets
    falling. The cost to store grains is a
    cost that will be added to the final
    selling price. The alternatives offered
    with several strategies using futures,
    options and forward contracting to sell
    and, if desired to renown, should
    strongly be considered.

    For both the speculator and the hedger,
    the facts outweigh the rumors and all
    the possible unknowns and conjectures of
    what might happen. I received an email
    this week asking if wheat would rally.
    Throughout the email, I saw if this
    happens then this should happen. "If"
    and "should" are not fundamental
    reasons.
    They are not statements of fact.

    #2
    More BS to add to an ever growing pile
    of marketeering poo! Why not flip a
    coin, heads sell, tails hold? Er better
    yet, git up in the morning and see how
    ya feel, da ya wanta shovel, coax a
    truckie to yer yard, suck up ta a grain
    company to take yer off grade grain? Er
    maybe check yer bank account, kin ya
    meet yer commitments, Christmas is comin
    da ya need some cash? All factors THAT
    in the reel world of Comedian framing
    marketeering, dhhhhhhh!

    Comment


      #3
      This disgusting to read...
      a contract has no meaning...

      China canceled 10 cargos of soybeans totaling 600,000 metric tons, Commerzbank AG said today in an e-mailed report, citing the country’s National Grain and Oils Information Center. China scrapped deliveries “that were supposed to be dispatched in December and January and that just a few weeks ago had been agreed at significantly higher prices,” said analyst Carsten Fritsch at Commerzbank in Frankfurt. It is “likely that these shipments will be renegotiated at lower prices,” he said.

      Comment


        #4
        China's gonna China, right?

        The sellers take a hedge against these sales already, they cover
        themselves. I don't know who takes the hit. Producers? I had a Chinese
        delegation come to my farm to see how quality hay is produced in Manitoba.
        I told them "Nice alfalfa isn't it? Too bad I won't ship any of it to
        China, you don't honor soybean contracts, why would you honor alfalfa
        contracts" You should have seen the red face on the translator...
        priceless.

        Comment


          #5
          Why is it not pay first then you get your effin beans? I don't leave any store without paying first?

          Comment


            #6
            That's bang on Tucker!!

            You ship a container to china. It gets rejected on
            the dock. They know your not going to pay the
            freight to ship it back so they get it for free. Isn't
            this game fun? Let's play again

            Comment


              #7
              You want a lesson on china, watch gold rush
              amazon, I think it's called, see how the Chinese
              operate in countries with no laws. It's amazing
              they take and shoot. When will all out their realize
              we're like cattle in the shoot at the packing plant
              and around the next corner is where the action is.

              Comment


                #8
                SF3

                Are you thinking of jungle gold?

                Comment


                  #9
                  Yea their you see how the Chinese really work.
                  Go in take Nd shoot any one who gets in their
                  way then leave a Fricking mess for the local. Their
                  not our friends.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    The Yellow horde is gonna take over the
                    world someday, one fram at a time. EVER
                    HEARD THAT BEFORE. It is destiny, bye bye
                    Saskabush, hellow take out foodie
                    guys......

                    Comment

                    • Reply to this Thread
                    • Return to Topic List
                    Working...