- Chicago values are firm at midday as the market adds back weather premium and as funds are modest buyers of wheat/soybeans. Recent day price action has been choppy as neither the bulls or bears are being satisfied. And with the US Government closed and the next round of US/China trade talks not occurring until the closing days of January. We note that this was to be the day of the January USDA Crop Report, which is now on hold based on the US Government partial closure. Tomorrow it will be 22 days (a record) since the US Government has been closed (since Dec 28) and there is no hint of when it will reopen. As such, it will be S American weather and hope for Chinese demand that will continue to direct Chicago prices. This is the 4th day of the Index Fund rebalance and the rebalance will end on Monday. There has been selling at the close in the grains and buying in soyoil in recent trading sessions. We look for the same to occur again today.
- Chicago brokers estimate that funds have bought 4,000 contracts of wheat and 2,000 contracts of soybeans, while being flat in corn and soyoil. Funds have sold 2,200 contracts of soymeal. Soy crush margins have been pressured this morning amid the declining soymeal market.
- Rumours abound that Ukraine has halted the repayment of VAT taxes as the country struggles with cash flow. The exporter community has been hit before as Ukraine holds back on its VAT repayment commitments. No comment is available from the Government, but the talk will slow Ukraine grain exports as few want to take the risk of VAT defaults or slow repayments.
- Russian rumours are widespread with the Ag Ministry calling for another meeting to discuss the soft export commitment/restrictions of the country’s 20 largest exporters. Smaller exporters will not be issued phytosanitary certificates and will not be able to ship until new crop. The Ag Ministry confirmed that it will only allow 12 million mt of grain exports from January 1. There remains some debate if that soft tonnage limit ends at the end of June or the end of July. Most sources argue for the end of June. If Russia exports just 1 million mt of corn and 1 million mt of barley, this would limit their wheat exports to 10 million over the next 6 months, or 1.66 million mt of wheat/month. This would place Russian 2018/19 wheat exports at around 35- 35.5 MMTs, down 1-1.5 million mt from the USDA annual forecast. It seems that the Russian Ag Ministry became worried with interior wheat prices near record highs and exporters still selling a sizeable 415,000 mt to Egypt.
- The midday GFS S American weather forecast is slightly wetter from the overnight run with local areas seeing better rain across NC Brazil. However, the broad trend is below normal rainfall across NC Brazil while above normal rain across the northern third of Argentina. The overall pattern reflects “stagnation”. The areas that are dry will get drier while flooding becomes a worsening problem for NE Argentina. The midday forecast calls for 0.25-1.50” of rain across Mato Grosso, Goias and MGDS over the next 10 days (10-50% of normal). There are a few locally heavier amounts. A ridge of high pressure holds across NC Brazil stoking above normal temperatures with highs in the 90′s to lower 100′s. Flooding rains are projected for NE Argentina with totals of 4-8.00”. An estimated 20-30% of the Argentine crop areas are enduring saturated soils. The remainder is thriving.
- S American weather will key to Sunday’s Chicago price direction. We expects that when the US Government reopens, the trade will see it as positive amid expectations for smaller US corn/soybean yields and a US winter wheat seeding rate that is the lowest in 110 years. If the Government stays shut, look for more Chicago choppiness.
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Weekend summary 11 January 2019