“Some companies with signed purchase contracts, for whom the CWB is unable to supply the contracted barley, may have to pay higher prices to obtain barley from grain companies or directly from farmers, as barley prices have increased recently."
Yes, if since last October is recent.
So the CWB contracted our barley without an offsetting hedge against price increases. For a farmer to do this is hedging, or setting a price for supply they are planning on growing. For the wheat board to do this with someone else’s grain is not hedging, they didn’t have the barley in stock and had to purchase it at some time in the future from farmers to fill those contracts.
Isn’t this gambling with farmer’s money? Why should farmers be on the hook for someone else’s gambling debts?
Yes, if since last October is recent.
So the CWB contracted our barley without an offsetting hedge against price increases. For a farmer to do this is hedging, or setting a price for supply they are planning on growing. For the wheat board to do this with someone else’s grain is not hedging, they didn’t have the barley in stock and had to purchase it at some time in the future from farmers to fill those contracts.
Isn’t this gambling with farmer’s money? Why should farmers be on the hook for someone else’s gambling debts?
Comment