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Bullish or Bearish Canola?
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The canola market seems to be ignoring the broader us grain markets. Soybeans wheat and corn have all rallied since putting in significant lows earlier this summer. Especially King corn which conventional wisdom says should lead the rest of the grains, although I'm not really convinced that that axiom holds true.
Meanwhile canola futures keep eroding even relative to soybeans and soy oil and crush margins.
Is this the hangover of the fact that producers were gun shy to presale very much production this year after last year's disaster and the poor start to this crop year? Now with decent crops on the way in most areas, everyone who will need to sell for cash flow or bin space at harvest, are finding themselves forced to sell all at once into the harvest happy hour?
I was under the impression that the premium that had been in the canola market due to last year's drought and whether earlier this year has long since been priced out, but the market seems to disagree with that.
At today's values, I would assume that the crush margins for canola would be much more profitable than soybeans, went from a premium to a discount.
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Peeled off 30 acres last night. An Average Crop And Nothing More!!! My land has more potential than what I got. Fertilized for 50 and got 40. So anyone says there is a bumper should be taken behind the barn and talked to about making up stories.
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Originally posted by WiltonRanch View PostPeeled off 30 acres last night. An Average Crop And Nothing More!!! My land has more potential than what I got. Fertilized for 50 and got 40. So anyone says there is a bumper should be taken behind the barn and talked to about making up stories.
Cheers
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Bearish.
I have farmed long enough to know how it works. Anyone who thinks sustained high prices last forever have short memories and are kidding themselves.
Based on the local crop, I’d be very bearish. Some crops FANTASTIC, some solid average, some probably a bit short of average.
If oats can be under four, canola could be under ten. Prove me wrong. Prepare accordingly.
ETA. I AM NOT saying canola will be under ten. I’m just saying not a soul on the planet knows. And also I am saying anyone who has farmed more than five or ten years should know about historic prices, and not build a business assuming diddly. Especially a business with zero control on so very many things.Last edited by Sheepwheat; Sep 9, 2022, 11:38.
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