CME: Farmers to Harvest Record Corn Crop
US - According to the latest USDA supply/demand update, US farmers this fall will harvest the largest corn crop on record, write Steve Meyer and Len Steiner.Between a 6.1 per cent increase in harvested acres (5.1 million
acres more than a year ago) and a 12.8 per cent increase in expected
yields (18.8 bu./acre higher than in 2011), US corn production for
the 2012/13 marketing year is now pegged at a record 14.790
billion bushels. This is 2.432 billion bushels or 20 per cent larger than a
year ago and about 1.75 billion bushels larger than the previous
record year output in 2009/10.
USDA was quite aggressive in its
estimates for the new corn crop but its data follows established
methodology whereby USDA analysts account for crop progress
so far this year and adjust their trend yields accordingly. With
planting progress well ahead of schedule so far this year and
weather forecasts indicating that the La Nina weather pattern
is coming to an end, USDA now expects above trend yields this
coming fall. Some analysts continue to wonder how realistic this
assumption is.
The sharp expansion in corn plantings has
brought more marginal and lower yielding acres into the mix.
While US farmers have approached current yield estimates in
the past, indeed yields were 165 bu./acre in 2009/10, that yield
was from planting 86.4 million acres, compared to 95.9 million
acres this year. It would appear to us that for current yield estimates
to materialize, a lot of things need to be just right for this
year’s corn crop. So far things are shaping up well but Mother
Nature still holds all the cards.
One surprising twist in the supply and demand table
was that USDA also increased projected ending stocks for old
crop corn. This ran counter most analysts estimates who were
expecting old crop ending stocks at around 750 million bushels,
compared to the 851 million bushels that USDA reported. USDA
reduced feed consumption estimates for this summer as more
wheat is currently going into livestock and poultry feed.
USDA
also did not change its estimates for US corn exports despite
much talk in the trade of large shipment to China and other destinations.
Demand estimates for the new crop were equally interesting
and different from what private analysts were contemplating
ahead of the report. USDA sharply increased US corn
feeding estimates in the new crop year, projecting feed and residual
use at 5.450 billion bushels, about 900 million bushels or
13.7 per cent higher than a year ago. This feeding level would imply a
notable decline in wheat feeding, as corn / wheat spreads widen
and also expansion in livestock and poultry numbers.
With the
calf crop declining in the next year, cattle feed demand will remain limited, and likely will contract. Some hog expansion is
expected but, based on current farrowing estimates into year end,
it is unlikely we will see more than a 1 per cent increase in hog numbers
at least through Q1 of next year. Maybe the broiler industry will
make a sharp U-turn and expand rapidly. There are some indications
that broiler supplies will recover by Q4. Lower corn prices
certainly are an inducement but keep in mind that for poultry
producers, soybean meal prices are very important, accounting
for as much as 30 per cent of the broiler ration.
Soybean meal prices
have increased sharply in recent weeks and are expected to stay
high into next year as well. But even as some analysts think the
feed estimates overstate the case for demand next year, they also
believe the current USDA export estimate may be on the low
side, especially if Chinese producers fail to produce another record
crop. A potential increase in exports could offset lower feed
numbers. USDA now expects the stocks/use ratio to double in
2012-13, pushing prices in the $4.5/area.
Further Reading
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