REUTERS: Iraq has bought 500,000 tonnes of wheat from Canada, U.S. grain traders said on Friday, but the Canadian Wheat Board declined to comment on the deal.
Kansas City wheat futures fell 1-1/2 to 3-1/2 cents per bushel on news of the deal, worth about $95 million, traders said.
"I believe the Canadians came down to the $190 (per tonne) FOB the Iraqis were looking for," said analyst Charlie Sernatinger with Chicago brokerage O'Connor & Co.
The best U.S. offers for hard red winter wheat were about $200 per tonne, on a free-on-board basis, he said.
Late last year, Iraq bought 1 million tonnes of wheat from U.S. firms at about $190 per tonne FOB.
The Iraqi Grain Board initially said it favored buying U.S. wheat but a rally in wheat futures pushed prices to the point where Iraq said it had to look at alternative sources.
Kansas City wheat futures have risen as much as 20 percent since early January, dampening wheat sales abroad for the United States, the world's biggest wheat exporter.
Prices are soaring amid buying by investment funds and concerns over crop damage due to a drought and cold weather in the southern U.S. Plains hard red winter wheat region.
U.S. grain traders said Iraq bought the Canadian wheat for shipment from March through May.
"They (Canada) were cheaper than U.S.," said an export trader who takes part in wheat tenders from Iraq.
A spokeswoman in Winnipeg for the CWB, which has a monopoly on western Canadian wheat and barley exports, cited company policy for declining to confirm or deny the deal.
Kansas City wheat futures fell 1-1/2 to 3-1/2 cents per bushel on news of the deal, worth about $95 million, traders said.
"I believe the Canadians came down to the $190 (per tonne) FOB the Iraqis were looking for," said analyst Charlie Sernatinger with Chicago brokerage O'Connor & Co.
The best U.S. offers for hard red winter wheat were about $200 per tonne, on a free-on-board basis, he said.
Late last year, Iraq bought 1 million tonnes of wheat from U.S. firms at about $190 per tonne FOB.
The Iraqi Grain Board initially said it favored buying U.S. wheat but a rally in wheat futures pushed prices to the point where Iraq said it had to look at alternative sources.
Kansas City wheat futures have risen as much as 20 percent since early January, dampening wheat sales abroad for the United States, the world's biggest wheat exporter.
Prices are soaring amid buying by investment funds and concerns over crop damage due to a drought and cold weather in the southern U.S. Plains hard red winter wheat region.
U.S. grain traders said Iraq bought the Canadian wheat for shipment from March through May.
"They (Canada) were cheaper than U.S.," said an export trader who takes part in wheat tenders from Iraq.
A spokeswoman in Winnipeg for the CWB, which has a monopoly on western Canadian wheat and barley exports, cited company policy for declining to confirm or deny the deal.
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