USDA Report Recap - Market Comments
Below is a USDA report recap
US Ending Stocks 2013
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April #
|
March USDA #
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Avg Guess
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Range of Guesses
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Corn
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0.757
|
0.632
|
0.824
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0.625 - 0.925
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Soybeans
|
0.125
|
0.125
|
0.138
|
0.107 - 0.160
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Wheat
|
0.731
|
0.716
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0.731
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0.700 - 0.755
|
World Ending Stocks 2012/13 |
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April #
|
March USDA #
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Avg Guess
|
Range of Guesses
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Corn
|
125.3
|
117.48
|
120.2
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108.13 - 125.00
|
Soybeans
|
62.6
|
60.21
|
60.1
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56.76 - 61.00
|
Wheat
|
182.3
|
178.23
|
178.6
|
176.90 - 180.00
|
South American Production Numbers |
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April #
|
March USDA #
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Avg Guess
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Range of Guesses
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Brazil
Corn
|
74.0
|
72.5
|
72.90
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69.10 - 76.40
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Argentine
Corn
|
26.5
|
26.5
|
25.586
|
24.0 - 26.50
|
Brazil
Soy
|
83.5
|
83.5
|
82.543
|
81.0 - 83.60
|
Argentine
Soy
|
51.5
|
51.5
|
50.502
|
49.00 - 52.00
|
It looked like the markets traded the US corn carryout
numbers right out of the gates; but then as they got further into the report
seen the world carryout numbers and things sold off.
Overall one probably considers the report a non-event;
friendly US carryout versus estimates; but negative on the world carryout side
of things. At 12:30 we have corn near
unchanged but spreads very firm, beans are off 3-4 cents, and wheat is down
15-17 cents. Corn and beans are very
close to where they were before the report came out and wheat isn’t much worse
but it is off a few pennies.
Some talk is out there that the weakness in wheat is just as
much from a buy the rumor sell the fact for the freeze concerns as well as the
fact that we still have yet to see an USDA announcement for the sale of SRW
wheat that was rumored to have happened last week.
Overall the report tells me that weather should become more
important and the fact that our balance sheets are tighter in the US then the
trade had guessed should also be supportive; it just isn’t supportive
today. Think about it this way; the first
thoughts after the March stocks report were that carryout would be 850 million
bushels to a billion bushels for US corn.
But instead the numbers came in at only 757 million bushels; a 125
million bushel increase; only about 1/3 of the 400 million bushels that the USDA
had found in the stocks report.
I think if it wasn’t for the negative world balance sheet
numbers that we could easily be limit up on corn; after all we did shoot up
about 20 cents right after the initial release of the update USDA Supply and
Demand report.
The big negative on the report is the increased world carry
out numbers as seen above. But keep in
mind that most of that is coming from China and over the last couple weeks we
have seen plenty of talk of China looking to buy wheat and new crop corn. Some of my sources indicate that much of the
grain stored in China has major quality concerns and might not be something
that can be used. So if our increased
supply isn’t used able supply how bearish is it?
Watch to see how we close today as that will be important
for the charts. The other thing I would
look for is wheat to move back to a follower; it had been leading the markets
but today’s report probably says wheat should now follow corn again. That doesn’t mean that wheat can trade on its
own; it just means that its own story probably won’t be a headline like it has
been. After all the actual frost damage
probably won’t be known for some time.
With the report behind US our marketing plans/ideas should start
to focus more on weather and demand. We
dodged a bullet today and hopefully that gives us a chance to make some higher
sales at better levels; but we also need to keep in mind that long term supply
looks to increase and today’s report showed us that global demand might be a
little softer too. So we should realize
that new crop corn and prices in general will have plenty of risk should
weather not be an issue.
I haven’t seen much for updated basis values; I have calls
in but no real response. I would think
that producer movement remains slow and that basis should bounce for corn; but
it could be a little hit and miss as there are just so many areas that have an
either extreme surplus or defeincey of corn.
Keep in mind that most ethanol plants are plugged for the next couple of
months and the spread inverting more should also draw out more supply from the
commercials as they won’t want to carryout corn in an inverted marketed.
Wheat basis is mixed; but I think it should have a downward
bias. Moisture in our area might help a
little more old crop move; guys will feel a little better and might not hold as
much if we wouldn’t have got this snow storm.
Please give us a call if there is anything we can do for
you.