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Get used to low prices

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    Get used to low prices

    Top Food Commodities Trader Olam Sees Low Grain Prices Into 2017 - Olam International Ltd., one of the world’s largest food commodities traders, forecasts that grain prices will remain low into 2017 as oversupply and softening Chinese demand weigh on crops. "Prices will stay low for the next six months," Olam’s chief executive officer, Sunny Verghese, said in an interview in Singapore last week. "We have very burdensome balance-sheets across the entire grain complex.” Wheat prices have fallen to their lowest in 10 years, while corn is at levels last seen during the global financial crisis, as farmers in key growing regions, including the U.S. and Russia, harvest bumper crops. Low grain prices have been a boon for consumers and companies such as Nestle SA and Kellogg Co. but are hurting farmers and agribusiness including Deere & Co., the world’s largest manufacturer of tractors and combines. "We see a significant increase in exportable surpluses and stocks build-ups in most growing countries; the weather has been very benign," he said. "On the demand side, there is some softening in China.” The views of Olam and its larger rivals, including Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., Bunge Ltd., Cargill Inc., Louis Dreyfus Co. and Glencore Plc, are closely followed by commodity investors because their trading relationships give them insight into global supply, demand and inventories trends. Verghese downplayed the risk that the potential emergence of the La Nina weather phenomenon could boost prices, saying Olam in-house meteorologists have nearly ruled out its arrival. "We see a very low prospect of La Nina event," he said. "We have proprietary research, and all the leading indicators show that we are unlikely to see one." La Nina is an on-and-off weather phenomenon that could make parts of the U.S. colder, Brazil drier and Australia wetter, boosting prices for commodities including natural gas, soybeans and coal. While Japan’s weather bureau last week said the pattern has already set in, other meteorological agencies, including the U.S. Climate Prediction Center, have recently lowered the chances of the phenomenon emerging this year or in early 2017. Verghese painted a particularly bearish outlook for corn, saying that the trading house largely agreed with U.S. Department of Agriculture projecting a record corn yield this year. Olam, however, sees a yield of 169-170 bushels per acre, below the 175.1 bushels projected by the USDA. "Even at 169, it doesn’t really matter. We are going to have a big crop." He said. The USDA is scheduled to update its forecast on Monday. Front-month corn prices in Chicago fell as low as $3.1475 a bushel in late August, the lowest since September 2009 and less than half the record high set in 2012 of $8.49 a bushel. Near-month wheat prices in Chicago fell last month to a 10-year low of $3.8675 a bushel, down more than 70 percent from the 2008 all-time high. Despite large crops and bumper stocks, Verghese said the world isn’t entering into a sustained period of ultra-low grain prices. "It’s a cyclical phenomenon. It’s not a structural one," he said.

    #2
    Sort of puts the lie, at least in the shorter term, to climate change and global warming which some predict will cause crop failures and production short falls.

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      #3
      I don't smoke, but this guy is into some good stuff.
      Ask South America how wonderful big was their crop. Ask S. Africa, ask China how the flood was a big boost, ask France/Germany how the crop was this year, ask Ontario, heck, ask western Canada.

      Comment


        #4
        The Boom in Ag peaked two summers ago!
        Welcome to the hand to mouth we can survive cycle!
        Throw in a low Production crop in 2017 for western canada and still won't increase the price we get!
        Wake up every one we are getting paid 1934 prices in 2016 and our costs keep going up every day!
        Bayer did it on seed and agrium joining potash do you think it's done to help us farmers.

        World is out of food I have now seen happen twice in my life time both filled by farmers changing and producing more!

        Here we go again.

        And they say history doesn't repeat it self!

        Comment


          #5
          My biggest.concern is if grain commodity prices get too high people will simply stop eating!

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            #6
            Everyone in the chain can make money paying DOUBLE current prices...farmer share is SFA of final product, any commodity is NOT valued only the processing/ transport/ selling, all mark up 100% and pass on.
            Yes diet change by billions of people and we are screwed. Also if word is Canada's crop is POOR quality, NOBODY will want to buy at any price, will shop elsewhere due to MASSIVE supply!
            Last edited by fjlip; Sep 12, 2016, 09:38.

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              #7
              Low prices should be $8.00 wheat and $12.00 canola.Not this ridiculous shit.

              Comment


                #8
                Sadly, the more we get paid the more our suppliers of goods and sevices will take. It almost has to be luck...before the Industry has time to react to the increase in our prices.

                Comment


                  #9
                  Reviewed some sale prices from 11, & 12. $14 peas and canola. $9 wheat.
                  Still say highest for an entire lifetime.

                  Comment


                    #10
                    Despite large crops and bumper stocks, Verghese said the world isn’t entering into a sustained period of ultra-low grain prices. "It’s a cyclical phenomenon. It’s not a structural one," he said.

                    Until there is a major reduction in supplies or a shift in what farmers world wide plant prices will be on low side of average or worse.
                    My counterparts in Germany Sweden and Denmark all tell they will continue to grow wheat barley and canola there "program" makes cereal farming profitable whatever the price meaning subsidies presume france is no different.

                    Find his lamina comments interesting we are currently in and has been statistically proven one of our strongest laninas ever.

                    Weather forecasts for aust are wet and good finish and if you believe 2017 forecast another average year.

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