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    #73
    Chaff;

    The CWB can keep its 'single desk' by allowing 'slipage'... through the 49th... that in turn keeps the faith that mafia tactics/corruption... are the best long term strategy to keep power.

    Same with seed growers and no-cost CWB export licenses... and CWB manufactured feed exemptions.

    Folks who won't break the law... are no threat... and those who will... can cash in so there is no reason to change the CWB!

    The ultimate frustration... tear your country apart... from the inside out... with corruption.

    Comment


      #74
      walk maybe you'd better take a look around Sask. 80% of the peas 99% of the lentils and 99% of the chicpeas are produced Here. Why is that once you hit the border you guys can't grow these ? Maybe if you changed your government once every century you'd also change your farming practice.....

      Comment


        #75
        Of which you can deliver and get paid for 100% of them, 100% of the time.

        Comment


          #76
          chaffmiester
          yes pretty impressive numbers

          my numbers were shooting from the hip ,looks like i didn't do too bad.

          but you missed the point i was trying to make.
          that being the relationship between HRS and durum prices considering their ending stocks to use ratios

          how does any grain, in this case durum maintain a preium to Hrs with a 40% -50% carry out. what was the average CO for hrs 20% ? you probably have that # too

          in other words what grain can maintain its price with supplies that burdensome.

          Name one other grain that can do that

          the only way is if you have the board saying we are not selling for less

          market power exists in durums case anyway

          admittedly the competition also benifits

          with COs like that any other grain in an open market would be 2$bushell

          Comment


            #77
            Sawfly. Just keep your head in the sand some more. Have you not noticed the canola numbers. The largest crop by 30% ever and look whats happening. Crush is up, exports are up and so is the price in the last 2 months. There is good carry in the market and YES you can sell all of your canola and pay your bills. Imagine getting paid for storage. What a concept! Even with all the increase movement there still will be a 25% carry over but the market is paying you for it and you have the choice whether or not to sell it all or gamble. Just think how big the carry over would have been if the CWB were in charge of canola. 40 to 50%. Think of the reprecussions of that. The price would be way lower in new crop and this would translate into all other COMPETING crops. They would drop as well. Board supporters do not understand the market. When there is that much carry over in certain commodities, its that much less pressure of others. Look at the battle for acres in the USA every spring. Wouldn't work if there was 40% carry over in corn or soybeans. Just remember too that the board is only calling 60% and 80% this year. That 20 to 40% carry over is added to last years.

            Comment


              #78
              Interesting that everyone wants to talk durum - the
              CWB poster child. Just a comment that wheat
              acreage in general is coming down - a good sign
              that wheat returns per acre/fit with a farming
              business is less than the non board crops which
              someone seems to indicate should be less than
              $2/bu. Close to zero growth in world durum
              demand (how much more pasta can people eat/no
              new uses) and only one inconsistent market with
              volumes based on weather (North Africa with the
              market couscous).

              From a price risk management direction, the CWB
              has shown zero creativity and innovation in durum.
              The zero use of the durum over the past 3 years
              reflects the $2/bu (a common number) discount for
              the The CWB needs to follow the example they use
              with malt barley and the cash plus (match farmer
              contracts against sales).

              I also find the comment on Saskatchewan pulses
              dominance interesting. I suspect you would find
              that several Albertans (including myself) that would
              agree with you. I note Alberta dominance in
              Canada in terms of cattle (where we have invested
              our efforts) and that brings up barley - the CWB
              crop that competes in a 80 % open market. For
              facts, Saskatchewan grows about 40 % of western
              Canada barley. About 1 mln tonnes is shipped to
              Alberta to feed our cattle industry (not the cattle or
              hog industry in Saskatchewan). About 50 % of malt
              capacity resides in Alberta). Things may have
              changed but Saskatchewan to grow about 75 % malt
              varieties (most impacted by the CWB sales desk
              decisions about how much malt barley to export).
              But I guess selling more barley to the export
              market market at higher prices than feed would
              create problems Saskatchewan farmers hate -
              paying taxes.

              Comment


                #79
                If you were to defer a grain check what would you
                defer? A CWB board grain or check from a special
                crop?

                I feel a lot safer deferring my CWB check.

                We had sold some lentils one time and the place
                went belly up and it was a pretty scary few months
                waiting to see if the check would come and to
                wonder what % pay out it would be when it got
                there. We were lucky we got paid the whole
                amount. Some other people I know were not so
                lucky with their canary seed they did not receive any
                thing and they were out a lot of $$$$.

                On our farm out of the 11 crops we grow some
                years Durum had the biggest acreage out of them
                all. It was about 60% durum and the other crops
                were divided into the other 40% so I would NOT say
                that durum is the number 11 crop on our farm. We
                grow durum over HRS on our farm because it yields
                higher on our farm and is worth more most of the
                time and has the same input cost.

                When we sit down to figure out a return on the 11
                crops after they are all sold into the market. Durum
                is most likely in the top 3 out of 11. Even if were to
                sell every thing else at the top of the markets.

                We do not know what the top 2 crops will be it
                changes from year to year. The last couple of years
                lentils have been number one on our farm followed
                by durum. We have a few different types of lentils
                reds, large greens ect.

                Comment


                  #80
                  Found this on the web

                  "– An Alberta government report has used false
                  assumptions and selective data to undermine the
                  value of the CWB, its president and CEO Ian White
                  said today. “This study is badly flawed,” White said.
                  “The authors have made sweeping assumptions to
                  create comparisons so simplistic that they are
                  meaningless.” The report, commissioned by the
                  Alberta government and prepared by Informa
                  Economics, was released last week. It calculates on
                  page 34 that the CWB earned significant premiums
                  (prices above market values) of up to $33 per tonne
                  in 10 of 11 markets studied, but then uses a
                  number of incorrect assumptions to discount them.
                  The report wrongly assumes that all wheat is the
                  same and that overall market share is what
                  determines the CWB’s ability to exercise market
                  power, White said. It ignores the crucial fact that
                  the wheat market is not homogeneous, but made
                  up of many segments that purchase specific kinds
                  of wheat. In certain segments, the CWB will hold a
                  very large market share for a particular kind of
                  wheat and thus earn substantial premiums. Because
                  of its flawed premise, the report selectively focuses
                  on only 11 of the 60 to 70 actual wheat markets the
                  CWB sells into each year – rejecting important,
                  high-value markets like Canada, the U.S. and
                  Europe. Based on false assumptions about what
                  grades or qualities of wheat these markets were
                  buying from Canada, the report then wrongly
                  adjusts and discounts the higher prices achieved by
                  the CWB in 10 of the markets. “This adjustment
                  does not reflect how grain marketing works in the
                  real world,” White said. “Wheat is different, markets
                  are different and our strategy as a single seller
                  takes advantage of exactly that fact.” The report
                  also blatantly misuses grain handling and
                  transportation data published by the respected
                  Quorum Corporation, which produces the quarterly
                  Grain Monitor report under contract to the federal
                  government. Quorum emphasizes in its reports that
                  efficiency comparisons cannot be made between
                  wheat and canola based on its calculations of
                  export basis and producer netback for each crop.
                  Yet that is precisely what Information has done.
                  Examples of other flaws include: • Lack of
                  acknowledgement that the CWB’s dominant
                  position in the durum market supports the overall
                  price structure.• Comparisons to U.S. elevator
                  prices, which are based on a different set of market
                  factors than Canadian wheat returns. American
                  wheat has an intrinsic price advantage due to
                  factors such as the dramatically lower proportion
                  exported from the U.S. (40 per cent compared to 80
                  per cent in Canada). This means less U.S. grain is
                  sold into diverse markets outside North America
                  where prices tend to be lower and transportation
                  logistics more expensive. • Handling system costs
                  are counted twice in the comparison between U.S.
                  and Canadian returns for wheat and durum. Farm
                  gate values that already account for system costs
                  are used, then a canola-versus-wheat comparison
                  is added that also accounts for those same costs. •
                  Failure to account for the CWB’s ability to assure
                  customers of long-term and consistent-quality
                  supply, which is a valuable competitive market
                  advantage, attributable to the single-desk
                  structure.• Failure to acknowledge the dramatic
                  differences in U.S. and Canadian rail capacity. The
                  study also fails to account for the important role
                  played by the CWB in keeping regulated rail freight
                  rates in Western Canada lower than American rates.
                  Based on all of the above, the CWB completely
                  refutes a key finding of the report that an open
                  market would generate significantly more revenue
                  for Prairie farmers than the single-desk system. “It
                  is ironic that this false conclusion is being
                  circulated in a year when the CWB marketing
                  approach has delivered extraordinary returns to
                  farmers,” White said. “We’ve conservatively pegged
                  that benefit at $560 million for 2007-08.” White
                  said the CWB will conduct further, more in-depth
                  analysis of the report’s methodology and
                  conclusions and intends to share those results
                  when completed. Controlled by western Canadian
                  farmers, the CWB is the largest wheat and barley
                  marketer in the world. One of Canada’s biggest
                  exporters, the Winnipeg-based organization sells
                  grain to over 70 countries and returns all sales
                  revenue, less marketing costs, to farmers. "  

                  Comment


                    #81
                    Jagfarms

                    I am glad you picked out the response to the Informa study. I note the CWB
                    performance measures highlighted in recent press releases. Based on the CWB $560
                    mln benefit, the operations should show $30/tonne on the equivalent of this years
                    page 43 of the 2006/07 annual report.

                    I also look forward to your comments on the rumored losses on the CWB risk
                    management programs (both their attempt at achieving an average price during the
                    year from p. 43 last year and the producer pricing options). I am really looking
                    forward to this years annual report.

                    Comment


                      #82
                      Reffering to the question about the farms having old money.
                      Some of the farms started out as small farms and expanded into large farms and some were large to start with.
                      It still takes good management to keep the farm going. I have seen quite a few large farms loose everything in a VERY short time and they had it all given to them from grandpa ect.

                      Comment


                        #83
                        Jag,Did you keep those trucks busy last year going south/over to the seed grower with the AMERICAN market??Glad to see some innovators taking durum out of the Canadian market to let the rest average up!Funny we haven`t heard of the almighty wrath of the `Borg`,keeping Canuck farmers under the great blankie!!Heard your competition got their durum cleaned out completely last year using the fert backhaul.

                        Comment


                          #84
                          Jagfarms,

                          CWB grain pays truckers the best...(freight payments by grainco's) nonboards don't pay generally... isn't that the real political reason you support the CWB now?

                          Comment

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