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 No cause for alarm on wheat prices: Bartholomaeus 

No cause for alarm on wheat prices: Bartholomaeus

05 Jul, 2009 03:30 AM
AUSTRALIAN farmers are largely shunning forward marketing options for the new season crop, with futures coming under the traditional North American harvest pressure.

Chicago Board of Trade December 09 wheat futures have come back almost 20pc since the start of June, to sit at US583 cents a bushel on Tuesday.

The futures market is reflecting a relatively pain-free US harvest, which is putting pressure on prices.

Callum Downs commodity analyst Malcolm Bartholomaeus said the pressure on wheat prices was normal for this time of year.

“We’re still travelling within expectations, there is no cause for alarm, if the prices improve, as they often do following the northern hemisphere harvest, then we’re right back in the middle of the range.

“Right now, there’s plenty of wheat around internationally, and there’s no reason for prices to go up.”

Mr Bartholomaeus said the prices were not enough to tempt farmers.

“There were some attractive prices back in February, but not many growers took advantage of them, due to concerns about production risk. There’s no point in getting involved in forward selling the crop as prices sit now.”

Now, even though a good break across much of the nation’s wheat belt has boosted prospects, Mr Bartholomaeus said prices were simply not good enough to garner interest.

“The prices are just not attractive, relative to the production risk,” he said.

One of the areas with the best crop potential is north-west New South Wales, where heavy summer and autumn rainfall has combined with a soil type well equipped to store moisture, to have farmers confident of a crop of some description even if the season turned off now.

However, Mr Bartholomaeus said there had been little marketing activity in the area.

“There isn’t a big culture of forward selling through that region, they look more towards storing grain and marketing it post-harvest.”

In terms of old crop, Mr Bartholomaeus said both interest and availability were declining.

“The available tonnage is tightening, but the shipping program has slowed right off, meaning any growers holding wheat still would be vulnerable.”

Meanwhile, AWB has released its initial pool returns for the 09-10 season, with a quote of $310-320 a tonne for the benchmark APW grade.

AWB’s Australian Commodity Management spokesman, Stuart Richardson, said this estimate of pool returns would give growers some of the price information needed to factor into planning, their grain marketing for the 2009/10 harvest.

Internationally, he said harvest was swinging into gear in many countries, and while production was expected to be down on last year’s big harvest, there was still scope for further improvement.

“While production is expected to be lower than last year’s record crop, there is still plenty of time for rain in the major exporting countries to boost maturing crops and lift yields,” he said.

Mr Bartholomaeus said there were issues with dry weather in key production areas, especially in Canada and Europe.

“There are drought issues in Alberta and western Saskatchewan, while there are pockets of dryness in Europe.

“The Europeans expect to be 20 million tonnes down on last year’s production.”

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Of course ABARE collapsed the price when they announced a coming record harvest
Posted by hedgehog, 6/07/2009 7:37:22 AM
I find the comments about plenty available rather odd, as world stocks are down on all grains from info I read very recently, and all of the

Food producers are bitching about the high cost of wheat! and there is a heavy push to be adding synth fibre and other non grain fillers to many baked goods.

So, like the dairy industry paying lower than production prices to producers yet prices doubling to consumers, I strongly suspect that there's a big gap between truth and reality, and the silo/storage companies are helping keep prices to growers lower than they could be.

Someone is making a killing here, just , as usual NOT the guy that puts the hard work in!

Posted by amicus curiae, 7/07/2009 8:45:20 PM

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Malcolm Bartholomaeus ...The pressure on wheat prices is normal for this time of year.  We’re still travelling within expectations, there is no cause for alarm, if the prices improve, as they often do following the northern hemisphere harvest, then we’re right back in the middle of the range.
Malcolm Bartholomaeus ..."The pressure on wheat prices is normal for this time of year. We’re still travelling within expectations, there is no cause for alarm, if the prices improve, as they often do following the northern hemisphere harvest, then we’re right back in the middle of the range."
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