grain market comments dec 6th
Markets where called weaker this a.m. behind a weak
overnight markets that saw corn break major support.
In the overnight session corn was down 9 cents, beans were
off 4 cents, KC wheat was 6 cents lower, MPLS wheat was off 6, and CBOT wheat
was 7 lower. At 9:20 outside markets
have the equities slightly positive with the DOW up 35 points while crude and
the US dollar are about unchanged.
The markets then opened up a little weaker then where the
overnight session left off; but as the day moved on we slowly gained ground and
found our markets positive when all was said and done. We left a bullish key reversal on the corn
charts (a key reversal would be making a new high or low for a move and then
reversing and closing the opposite) in today’s price action we saw the March corn
contract get to its lowest level since last March and then we managed to
reverse the day closing up 5-6 cents or about 17 cents off of its lows.
Besides corn closing up 5-6 we seen new crop 2012 corn up 2,
beans up 3, KC wheat up 3-4, MPLS wheat up 1, and CBOT wheat up 1-2 cents. Outside markets have the dollar near
unchanged with the cash index at 78.519, crude also was near unchanged
presently Jan is trading about 101 a barrel, and the equities closed firmer
with the DOW up 52 points.
Overall a decent day for the grains; nice to see the markets
turnaround from the lows put in early in the session. Perhaps some of the bad news that we have
seen recently is finally build into the prices?
(China corn crop bigger, South American crops bigger, Australian wheat
crop bigger, blenders tax credit ending, massive world supplies that seem to
get bigger daily, etc)
I guess only time will tell if some of the recent bearishness
that has surrounded our markets has lost it bang so to speak and selling has
become exhausted.
Later this week we will have a USDA report; ideas are for
the corn carryout to show little changes, beans to see a small increase in
carryout, and wheat to see little changes.
Overall estimates are 845 million bushels for the corn carryout versus
843 million last month, beans 211 versus 195, and wheat 830 versus 828.
Overall bias is for a slightly weaker USDA S & D report due
to weak demand. Perhaps at some point
the recent price break helps out that demand but as of now we really are not
seeing super great export demand; perhaps due to the big crops from our
competitors. The risk is that see our
competitors continue to act like Wal-Mart so to speak in that no matter how
cheap we try to sell grain for they are sitting there with so much supply that
they will sell it lower. Eventually that
should end and perhaps with the Ukraine wheat crop getting projected lower it
is sooner than later.
Basis is a little defensive as many producers have done a
good job locking some of it in and we simply lack export to domestic
competition for most all of our grains.
Quality concerns have been talked about with the Australian
wheat crop; but all that really does is create even more competition for our corn
via more feed wheat.
Don’t forget that tomorrow we will have another MWC
Marketing Hour Round Table where we will go over some charts and do some mock
trading.
Also we are still offering free delayed price for both
winter wheat and spring wheat.
Thanks