To be clear, I am still very concerned about a continued move lower for the oilseeds and believe having price protection is very prudent risk management. I still believe holding the soybean or canola puts previously discussed is important.
The idea of buying canola call options is primarily to protect oneself against a surprise rally if you have delivery obligations on presold production and a drought reduced crop potential.
The burdensome supplies and trade implications are well documented. Matters could get worse for soybeans if the planting delays in the US Midwest result in corn acres being switched to soybeans. The planting deadlines are fast approaching for corn and the flooding rains only seem to be getting worse. The new farm payment just announced will pay a per acre rate regardless of what is seeded (but something has to be planted to get the payment). That is were things could get worse for soybeans.
On the other hand, the delays could last long enough that soybean acres are lost as well. That would combine with an expected decline in yield (due to seeding date) and a likely strong corn market to trigger fund short covering. With money manager positions at a record net short for soybeans (168,835 contracts or 840 mil bu net short) and just off the record for canola, a weather rally could be violent. Keep in mind, the money managers have had a net long position of 200-250,000 contracts on multiple occasions. As such, that one group alone could buy over 2 bil bu of soybeans just to go from their extreme net short to extreme long.
Back to the original point, if the drought conditions in Western Canada don't improve and actually start gaining some market attention, they will certainly add urgency to any rally. That's when having canola calls in place to give you the option to own futures on any tonnes that are presold would be helpful.
As of today, Nov Canola closed at $455. Nov $470 calls closed at $8.20/t, $480 calls at $5.80 and $490 calls at $4.10.
Just a thought...
The idea of buying canola call options is primarily to protect oneself against a surprise rally if you have delivery obligations on presold production and a drought reduced crop potential.
The burdensome supplies and trade implications are well documented. Matters could get worse for soybeans if the planting delays in the US Midwest result in corn acres being switched to soybeans. The planting deadlines are fast approaching for corn and the flooding rains only seem to be getting worse. The new farm payment just announced will pay a per acre rate regardless of what is seeded (but something has to be planted to get the payment). That is were things could get worse for soybeans.
On the other hand, the delays could last long enough that soybean acres are lost as well. That would combine with an expected decline in yield (due to seeding date) and a likely strong corn market to trigger fund short covering. With money manager positions at a record net short for soybeans (168,835 contracts or 840 mil bu net short) and just off the record for canola, a weather rally could be violent. Keep in mind, the money managers have had a net long position of 200-250,000 contracts on multiple occasions. As such, that one group alone could buy over 2 bil bu of soybeans just to go from their extreme net short to extreme long.
Back to the original point, if the drought conditions in Western Canada don't improve and actually start gaining some market attention, they will certainly add urgency to any rally. That's when having canola calls in place to give you the option to own futures on any tonnes that are presold would be helpful.
As of today, Nov Canola closed at $455. Nov $470 calls closed at $8.20/t, $480 calls at $5.80 and $490 calls at $4.10.
Just a thought...
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