National Post suggests Westons to benefit from grain price increases by increasing their margins. Same old same old , everyone in the chain makes more but the primary producer gets squeezed.
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Let me get this right:
Grain prices go up, and Weston's (a bakery) margins improve.
Grain prices go up and farmers "get squeezed".
Is this CWB-economics 101? Or are you missing something in the story?
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Perhaps agstar77 is admitting the CWB cannot do much to achieve premiums out of the domestic milling industry.
From a farmer standpoint, total payments will be up by about $24/tonne in 2006/07 versus 2005/06 (1CWRS 13.5). Converted to Canadian dollar futures have been up substantially more but much has been eaten up by weaker basis levels. 2007/08 outlook (to date) is for lower payments.
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Perhaps just a way of viewing - haven't seen the original article so am trusting your interpretation.
I would expect a company like Westons to increase prices to reflect higher costs. Having said that, there is lots of competition on bread shelves at local grocery stores to keep Weston bread prices in line with that of its competitiors.
If you think there is excess profit in milling and baking, I encourage you to invest up the supply chain.
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chaff, I think this is where Agstar is coming from.
Difference from one year ago for my farm (estimated)
NB Barley cost up $30 per acre, revenue up $154 per acre.
Canola cost up $40/acre, revenue up $85/acre
NB Wheat costs up $33/acre, revenue up $85/acre
CWB #1 13.5 CWRS cost up $33/acre, revenue up $26/acre
CWB Malt Barley cost up $30/acre, revenue up $36/acre.
So if you only look through the eyes of the cwb, things do look grim.
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