The question of why the adjustment factor on feed barley got me thinking and there is a logical reason for the adjustment factor but you have to understand pooling.
Lets say the CWB had sold 100,000 tonnes of feed barley at $150/tonne port. This barley could have been sold in a couple of ways. First is feed barley carried in inventory from 2005/06. Second could be sales the CWB has made on behalf of farmers (note this sale could be made without a farmer contract - CWB has the right to make sales on your behalf even though you have not contracted with them).
In early pools, the assumption might be that all the feed barley the CWB will get is the 100,000 tonnes. Voila, average price - $150/tonne.
World feed barley markets rally. The international price for additional business is now $200/tonne (situation today). Lets assume the CWB thinks it can make 100,000 tonnes worth of additional business at this value. I'll let you work the math but the new PRO/average price is $175/tonne port. 200,000 tonnes and the new PRO is $187.50/tonne etc.
The price signal a farmer would get from an open market would be $200/tonne in this scenario.
Same comments would apply to malt barley these days.
From a technical standpoint, I get more and more frustrated with PRO releases on set dates when the real driver should be signicant market price changes.
Issues around how inventory is valued between crop years also come into play as well how the interest earning from old sales.
Lets say the CWB had sold 100,000 tonnes of feed barley at $150/tonne port. This barley could have been sold in a couple of ways. First is feed barley carried in inventory from 2005/06. Second could be sales the CWB has made on behalf of farmers (note this sale could be made without a farmer contract - CWB has the right to make sales on your behalf even though you have not contracted with them).
In early pools, the assumption might be that all the feed barley the CWB will get is the 100,000 tonnes. Voila, average price - $150/tonne.
World feed barley markets rally. The international price for additional business is now $200/tonne (situation today). Lets assume the CWB thinks it can make 100,000 tonnes worth of additional business at this value. I'll let you work the math but the new PRO/average price is $175/tonne port. 200,000 tonnes and the new PRO is $187.50/tonne etc.
The price signal a farmer would get from an open market would be $200/tonne in this scenario.
Same comments would apply to malt barley these days.
From a technical standpoint, I get more and more frustrated with PRO releases on set dates when the real driver should be signicant market price changes.
Issues around how inventory is valued between crop years also come into play as well how the interest earning from old sales.
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