Charlie lots of talk about Australian hedge pressure on our canola futures. We grow about 4.5 times the canola they do. Is hedge pressure for real or is it just talk from Winnipeg. If it is for real when is the Australian Canola harvest.
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Just talked to someone who is "in the know" about Aussie trades on the WCE canola pit. He suggested that 10% to 20% of the volume originates down under.
The Aussies are getting geared up to harvest canola now with peak export sales pressure coming in Jan & Feb.
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Rain;
If our CDN$ was at the same level (20% lower) than at last year at this time, we would be looking at Jan 04 trading at 360/t.
It is very healthy to have a fluid market with good volume... as when profitable prices occur, then we have the ability to hedge them without crashing the market down.
The US beans are rallying on weakness of the US$ as much as on anything else... looks like to me!
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Perhaps we all can agree canola represents good value to customers (i.e. cheap relative to alternative oilseeds). This is a change from last year when canola was in short supply around the world and was expensive relative to alternatives.
Cheap prices tend to take care of themselves so I like to look at the numbers. Visible commercial stocks canola (week 17 CGC grain stats weekly) - 770,000 t versus 1.08 MMT same time 2002. Canola exports to date - 1.54 MMT versus 641,000 last year same time. Crush - 1.08 MMT versus 641,000 t.
Given the current situation, I think the canola industry will keep up this pace of crush and exports right to the end of the crop year. I think Canadian canola carryovers have potential to get very tight this summer which has at least some optimism for prices. The enemy is the availability of South American starting in March and a potential return to better yields in the US/a monster increase in Canadian canola acres this spring.
Long and short. Still a disciplined canola seller with targets. Having said that, there is at least some reason for price optimism first half 2004.
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rain
I agree with your comments here, early to mid 1990's dollar in the 80 cent level Canola oil above .26 Canola hovering around $9.60 - 10.00
regularly approx same supply on percentage basis. However we may have held out for too much last year and sent potential buyers beating the bushes for alternative sources? Time to build up the pipeline.
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rain (jeez i like that handle)
No one is suggesting forever and as feed barley sellers found out last year there are always alternatives, but the largest one is managing supply, inventory, use, (hand to mouth) and buying the bottoms as available. Restrained buying always works till the market swings.
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Rain and Boone;
You folks have NOT talked about a factor that soybeans is becoming more and more exposed to... POLITICS.
Between Brazil, China, Anti GMO EU that takes GM soymeal from Brazil and the master of political spinning - the US - (with an arm twist thrown in) there is enough politics to turn any market into chaos.
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