Feedgrain and Wheat Situation & Outlook John D. Anderson Mississippi State University
Commodity Markets in the News Record high commodity prices leading to… – … credit crunch for grain elevators and reduced forward pricing against deferred contracts – … proposed tighter limits on speculative trading – … possible early out for some CRP land – … discussion of partial waiver of RFS biofuel mandates – … export taxes in several countries (see, e.g., Argentina)
What’s behind all this? It depends – mostly on who you ask Plenty of suspects – Wheat crop failures in 2006 and 2007 – Economic growth in India and China – High crude oil prices – Bioenergy production in developed countries – Commodity market speculation
World Production of Grains
World Stocks/Use Ratio: Total Grains
Corn Highlights Corn prices began moving sharply higher in Fall 2006 In 2008, prices moved well past previous record set in July 1996 Futures prices reflect expectations of relatively high prices as far out as contracts are traded
Weekly Chicago Corn (Cash)
CBOT Corn: September 22, 2008
Corn Highlights Corn prices began moving sharply higher in Fall 2006 In 2008, prices moved well past previous record set in July 1996 Futures prices reflect expectations of high prices as far out as contracts are traded Current economic uncertainty creating huge volatility Pullback from June highs reflects… – … improving crop condition ratings – … effect of outside markets (esp. crude oil, dollar) – But longer term fundamentals are exceptionally strong
Corn Market Volatility: CZ8 DateCloseChange Sep 15562’0-1’2 Sep 16532’2-29’6 Sep 17554’0+21’6 Sep 18527’2-26’6 Sep 19542’2+15’0
DEC08 Corn
Crop Condition: Good + Excellent
Corn Balance Sheet 2004/052005/062006/072007/082008/09 Planted Ac Harv. Acres Yield Prod Ethanol Exports Total Use End. Stks Price
Feedgrains Balance Sheet 2004/052005/062006/072007/082008/09 Planted Ac Harv. Acres Yield (MMT) Prod Dom. Use Exports Total Use End. Stks
Corn Stocks/Use
Does the RFS Matter? RFS mandate has an enormous impact on market participant expectations – With respect not just to the level but also to the stability of demand – Because of mandates, corn demand from ethanol sector should be less price responsive than other sectors Effect of oil prices is also critically important – High oil price supports corn use for ethanol despite higher corn prices
RFS Mandate History
Corn Use Components
Corn Use: US Ethanol v. Foreign Feed
Two Models of Corn Demand No MandateMandate
RFS Mandate and Demand
Distribution of Corn P & Q PriceQuantity
Summary High prices for corn High offtake of corn despite high prices – Weak dollar – Ethanol production A bit of slack showing up in world grain stocks, but US corn balance sheet tighter in 2008/09 – Lower 2008 plantings – And potential for late-season damage But corn fundamentals will likely be overwhelmed by outside market influences
Wheat Highlights Declining world stocks in 2006/07 and 2007/08 due largely to production problems in key production regions Soaring prices in winter 2008 Larger production in 2008 increasing stocks, decreasing prices – But, strong fundamentals for corn and beans will continue to support prices Weak basis, high production costs likely to reduce US acreage this fall
Wheat Balance Sheet 2004/052005/062006/072007/082008/09 Planted Ac Harv. Acres Yield Prod Dom. Use Exports Total Use End. Stks Price
Wheat Stocks/Use
US Avg. April Fertilizer Prices Source: USDA-NASS, Agricultural Prices, April.