Weekly Roberts Report

US - Agricultural US Commodity Market Report by Mike Roberts, Commodity Marketing Agent, Virginia Tech.
calendar icon 5 August 2010
clock icon 6 minute read

LEAN HOGS on the CME closed up on Monday with the exception of some deferreds. AUG’10LH futures finished at $86.900/cwt; up $1.075/cwt and $4.900/cwt higher than this time last week. The FEB’11LH contract closed down $0.225/cwt at $76.775/cwt but $2.150/cwt higher than last Monday. Beginning with the April 2011 contract losses were incurred. The trimming of the U.S herd from 2008 to 2009 is now helping. Finally hog producers should be making a little on their investments in the wake of high corn prices, low hogs prices, and the H1N1 hysteria. Fundamentally demand is at a strong point with higher beef prices and supply is down. USDA on Monday put the average pork price at $90.65/cwt, up $0.83/cwt from Friday and $5.39/cwt over last Monday’s report. Several floor traders in Chicago expect hog prices to trend lower in the coming weeks as summer feeder pigs are fattened and reach market. They don’t consider hot weather to be a factor in negatively affecting gain due to confinement facilities that insulate hogs from the heat. News that Russia will resume buying US poultry was considered bullish for pork in that those supplies will not stay in the US consumer market. The latest lean hog index was place at 83.94/lb, up 0.99/lb from Friday and 4.91/lb over last week at this time. According to HedgersEdge.com, the average packer margin was raised $0.75/head to a positive $7.65/hd based on the average buy of $61.73/cwt vs. the average breakeven of $64.59/cwt.

CORN futures on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) closed down from profit taking and hedger selling after being pulled higher by soaring wheat on Monday. The SEPT’10 contract closed at $3.904/bu; down 2.25¢/bu but 26.5¢/bu higher than last report. DEC’10 corn futures closed off 2.25¢/bu at $4.044/bu but 26.5¢/bu higher than last Monday. The DEC’11 contract closed at $4.306/bu; down 2.5¢/bu but 16.25 cents higher than a week ago. Soaring wheat prices on news of drought in Russia, better crude oil and gold prices, as well as a weaker US dollar caused corn prices to soar out of the gate. However, profit-taking by non-commercials, hedge selling by commercials, quick farmer selling, and lower-than-expected exports pressured corn near the close. Funds bought near 8,000 contracts while commercials sold near 12,000 lots. When funds buy or sell it is a measure of money flow into or out of a commodity market. USDA put corn-inspected-for-export at 31.528 mi bu vs. expectations for 38-41 mi bu. USDA did confirm a sale of 232,000 tonnes (9.1 mi bu) of US corn to an undisclosed buyer for 2010/11 delivery. Good crop weather forecast for the US Midwest was a neutral influence today. USDA lowered the good-to-excellent US corn rating by 1 per cent to 71 per cent. Several floor sources said the corn pits considered anticipated this. It is a very, very good idea to get the 2010 crop to 80 per cent priced, as well as advance sales of the 2011 crop to 30 per cent priced.

SOYBEAN futures on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT) closed mixed on Monday with nearbys gaining and deferreds losing some. The AUG’10 soybean contract closed at $10.530/bu; up 0.75¢/bu and 53.25¢/bu higher than a week ago. SEP’10 soybean futures finished up 7.25¢/bu at $10.192/bu and 44.75¢/bu higher than last report. NOV’10 futures closed at $10.100/bu, up 5.0¢/bu and 44.0¢/bu lower than a week ago. NOV’11 soybean futures closed down 2.0¢/bu at $9.970/bu. Soaring wheat prices, outside markets, drought in Europe seen as trimming canola yields, and a weaker US dollar supported soybean prices. Even though USDA reported soybeans-inspected-for-export at 5.933 mi bu vs. 7-10 mi bu in expectations (a bearish influence), USDA confirmed sales of 116,000 tonnes (4.26 mi bu) for near-term delivery to China and sales of 130,000 tonnes (4.78 mi bu) of US soybeans for delivery near-term to an unknown buyer (a bullish influence on prices). Brazil lowered its soybean crop output by 1.1 per cent and trade volume there fell to 10,000 tonnes (0.37 mi bu) vs. expectations there for 50,000-55,000 tonnes (1.84-2.02mi bu). Hedge-related selling by commercials pressured prices while fund buying was supportive. Non-commercials bought over 5,000 lots. Weather over the next two weeks will determine yields and forecasts are not favorable for a better-than-expected crop. However, they weren’t last year either. Very brisk farmer selling pressured prices amid good cash prices. Barge traffic picked up on the Mississippi as ports were better suited to commodity movement. USDA lowered the good-to-excellent crop rating 1 per cent to 66 per cent. If soybean futures start to slide on Tuesday it would be a good idea to get 90 per cent of the 2010 crop priced and up to 20 per cent of the 2011 crop priced.

WHEAT futures in Chicago (CBOT) soared on Monday on reports of severe drought in European Russia. The drought in Russia is the worst in over 130 years and is expected to lower yields there by 20 per cent to 78 mi tonnes (2.87 bi bu). This could lower exports 20 per cent to 15 mi tonnes (551 mi bu); 6 mi tonnes (221 mi bu) lower than last year. Some experts are predicting a 30 per cent-40 per cent reduction in Russian exports. In addition, Canada is expecting its lowest wheat yields in almost 10 years. This is good news for US wheat growers. This offsets the expected record Indian crop of 80.7 mi tonnes (2.97 bi bu). The SEPT’10 wheat contract closed at $6.392/bu; up 31.75¢/bu and 49.75+¢/bu higher than this time last week. JULY’11 futures finished up 28.75¢/bu at $7.390/bu and 72.75+¢/bu cents higher than last report. Wheat futures closed on sharp fund buying coupled with continued drought influences on global crops. A weaker dollar and rising equities encouraged the surge. Funds bought over 13,000 lots. A rush to sell by farmers did not limit prices much. Exports also helped. USDA put wheat-inspected-for-export at 22.043 mi bu vs. expectations for 18-22 mi bu. Egypt took 180,000 tonnes (17.64 mi bu) of Russian wheat from global stocks. It would be a very, very good idea to price up to 80 per cent of the 2011 crop at this time if you haven’t already.

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