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Where is this surplus ???

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    #37
    Originally posted by wiseguy
    P and H used to store canola and flax for us !

    Kept canola and flax there for quite a few years !

    Free storage good ole days !
    Did they actually store it or just not pay you till you wanted to price it?

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      #38
      If you have that kinda cash why would you bother even farming ??

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        #39
        Originally posted by wiseguy
        Called storage but They let us price it when ever we wanted !
        Was called “Blackbooking” in the good old days

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          #40
          Using bins as safe deposit boxes went the way of the wheat board.

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            #41
            My thots exactly Furrow

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              #42
              Originally posted by FarmJunkie View Post
              My thots exactly Furrow
              600-800K cash in an active farm is kinda ****-all, even if you quit. Have to sell the iron and maybe land to top up the retirement fund.
              Even that amount for general public isn't a pile of money these days.
              Houses are pricey, vehicles are pricey, there is no ROI on money in the bank, may as well continue to bang your head against the wall and risk it trying to make some money.

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                #43
                Group . . . We are heading into a global grain glut this crop year. Canada’s depressed grain prices are a reflection of this. India is now an exporter of pulses, and until that changes, demand for Cdn pulses ie: peas will remain muted. Russia is now battling the Ukraine for wheat market share. This has now become a battle for who can export the cheapest in the Black Sea region. MWE wheat tested fresh contract lows this past week. The U.S. is still king of corn, but that is about it for grain markets.

                Now stir-in a currency war in-progress. The decline in the Brazilian real continues to place pressure on U.S. soybean values. This has contributed direct pressure on canola.

                The U.S. tariff war has changed global trade patterns, some permanently (IMO).

                I know my comments haven’t been popular, but deflation have these markets by-the-throat. Central bankers can’t say the word because it is admitting their inflation policies have been defeated. This is the elephant-in-the-room. Interest rates globally are heading more negative (IMO). This is a reflection of massive debt and insane money printing that is now costing us all.

                Personally, I’m a promoter of moving the grain via basis signals and replace with paper if you want to remain unpriced. If managed properly, this is far less risky strategy than speculating on unpriced grain storage at home.

                In my view, commercial storage and feedlot space will get tight by October. Domestic barley sales will plug within 6 weeks, then it is next year country for movement. There will likely be more feed wheat and durum in the mix. Feedlot barley bids do reflect a slight premium for Jan movement, and a larger premium for April. But you will have to wait for your cheque. Another strategy, move the barley and replace with long term corn calls. I still miss the Western Barley contract. It worked . . . .

                My apologies if I have pissed some agrivillers off, but I am trying to call a spade-a-spade in the current market place.

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                  #44
                  Think of farming with no payments at all. Put the payment cash into your bottom line. These guys are or at least can be making a killing farming. That is why they still farm. To add exponentially to their kitty.

                  Not much risk if you can suck up a few disaster years.

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                    #45
                    Sheep. They can break even for a decade or two.

                    Errol. 80% of 19 wheat long gone on paper. Just have to thresh it lol.

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                      #46
                      Back to the fake surplus
                      Local elevators , both managers say the same thing . Multiple locations across western Canada can not find grain or could not at all before harvest to fill trains
                      So I ask again where is it ?

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                        #47
                        Originally posted by furrowtickler View Post
                        Back to the fake surplus
                        Local elevators , both managers say the same thing . Multiple locations across western Canada can not find grain or could not at all before harvest to fill trains
                        So I ask again where is it ?
                        Don't ask silly questions.

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                          #48
                          Either you're talking to the wrong elevator managers or they weren't trying very hard.

                          Translation: Price not good enough to sweep the bins

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