- HEADLINES: GASC wheat sale happens $150/mt more than a tender nearly 2 months ago; Paris wheat rallies strongly.
- Chicago futures are mixed at midday with wheat and new crop corn futures pushing higher while old crop corn/soybeans sag. Soyoil futures and May corn are against prior contact highs while the wheat market adds premium for arid Plains weather forecasts. Chicago will be closed on Friday for the Easter Holiday weekend and traders are adjusting risk accordingly. It is Central US weather and the Russian war against Ukraine that holds sway over Chicago values next week. We look for a mixed to higher close with US weekly export sales to be large for corn on Thursday.
- Paris wheat futures have rallied strongly (easing back by close of business) as traders understand that importers and millers will increasingly turn to the EU for future wheat needs. Black Sea fob offers may be cheaper, but insurance and freight costs will make this war origin prohibitively expensive. And there is a risk that NATO members may add Russian oil/wheat to their sanctions list. The risk of Russia wheat is sizeable both on a CIF cost and execution basis.
- Chicago brokers estimate that funds have sold 2,100 contracts of corn and 3,200 contracts of soybeans, while buying 1,500 contracts of wheat. In soy products managed money has sold 2,300 soymeal and bought 4,300 contracts of soyoil.
- Egypt’s GASC secured 290,000 mt of EU wheat (240,000 mt of French and 50,000 mt of Bulgarian wheat) at a fob cost that ranges from $449.50-451.75 which equates back to $480-494.25 CIF using freight costs of $30.50-42.50/mt. GASC also secured 60,000 mt of Russian wheat at $460/mt CIF. We hear that the fob sale price on the Russian wheat was $380/mt with the estimate on freight costs at $80/mt. GASC paid nearly $150/mt more for wheat than its last tender that was nearly 2 months ago. The rise in price must be eye watering to the Egyptian buyer.
- US weekly ethanol production fell slightly from last week to 293 million gallons vs 295 million gallons. This production is up 6% from last year, but slightly below the weekly average needed to reach the USDA’s revised yearly forecast of 5,375 million bu of corn. The good news is that US ethanol stocks fell 46 million gallons to 1,042 million which is up 21% from last year. US blenders are enjoying their best margins in years at $0.08/gallon. This should boost demand going forward. Brazilian ethanol prices continue to soar which should boost imports from the US with ethanol cheaper than unleaded gasoline.
- The midday GFS weather forecast is consistent with ongoing arid weather across the Southern and Central US Plains with additional snow to accumulate across North Dakota and the northern third of Minnesota. Cool to cold temperatures will prevail into April 24 which will slow seeding and seed germination. A brief warm up follows. The planting window is pushed forward to the last days of April and early May. The extended range forecast places rain in the 11–15-day period across the Eastern Plains, leaving key western wheat areas in a deepening drought. Cold air pours southward into the Central US in the closing days of April keeping spring planting progress slow.
- The Russian war rages on with Putin commenting that any cease fire/peace accord is nearly dead. The Russians are building military might to the west of the Donbas. Ukraine spring seeding is reported to be slow. Getting Midwest corn seed in the ground has been challenging with cold temperatures to restrict germination. Chicago will remain highly sensitive to Central US weather following the Easter Holiday. We maintain a bullish outlook with Central US weather far from perfect and Chinese soybean supplies tightening.