29 July 2022

  • HEADLINES: GFS weather forecast cooler with some rain for Iowa on day 10; Ukraine corridor to start working this weekend? Bulls take profits on weather uncertainty.
  • Soybeans surge in old crop cash squeeze; Midday GFS weather forecast less threatening for Central US crops; Rumours abound that several stranded vessels will leave Ukraine ports this weekend, Russia selling fob wheat.
  • Chicago futures are mixed at midday with a strong early rally uncovering windfall profit taking from early week buyers. US wheat futures have set back on news that several stranded cargoes could leave Ukraine ports this weekend as a corridor is mapped out as agreed to by Russia and Ukraine. August soybeans rallied to $16.71/bu, their best price level since June 10, while nearby soymeal futures scored new contract highs above $513/mt. December soymeal is resting at contract highs with a push above $440/ton confirming a bullish technical breakout on the charts. The next upside price targets rest at $15-15.20 basis November soybean futures and $6.50-6.55 basis December corn. We maintain that market volatility is going to stay extreme with each new weather model run gaining in importance.
  • Chicago brokers estimate that fund managers have bought 9,800 contracts of soybeans, 10,500 contracts of corn and 2,500 contracts of Chicago wheat. In the products, funds have bought 5,400 contracts of meal/6,400 contracts of soyoil.
  • The soybean market has enjoyed its best weekly rally since 2004, 18 years ago. Record high US cash crush margins ($3.25-4.00/bu) along with Argentina slowing their soymeal exports as producers hold fast to cash soybeans due to soaring inflation, has sparked the recovery. US crushers look to produce at full capacity into the new crop US export season that starts in mid-September. Amid Brazil’s nearly sold-out soybean position of old crop, the US will gain world soybean demand going forward. And making matters worse, the 2022 US soybean crop is behind in maturity, which further adds to the bullish cadence with crush margins so profitable. Record large US soybean crush rates are expected in Q1 of the 2022/23 crop year which will firm cash basis bids.
  • FAS/USDA reported the sale of 132,000 mt of US soybeans to an unknown destination. The purchase was one of the first sales announcements in weeks. US China relations are politically chilly, but China has an estimated 8.6 million mt of new crop purchases on the books with another 1.5-2.0 million mt of US soybeans held in the unknown destination category. China has about 1.5 million mt of old crop soybeans left to ship before the end of the 2021/22 crop year.
  • Ukraine President Zelenskiy made a surprise visit to Chornomorsk near the southern city of Odessa today. He denounced the Russian blockade of grain and stated that Ukraine is ready to start feeding the world again. Whether the Russian’s allow Ukraine to export much corn/wheat will be closely followed once the stranded vessels leave. The Russian’s are aggressive sellers of their wheat in recent days with new purchases by N Africa/the Middle East. Chicago wheat/corn futures have been pulled off their highs on the news that a Ukraine Export Corridor could become operational this weekend.
  • The midday GFS weather forecast is like the overnight run and keeps any meaningful precipitation confined to the S Plains, Delta and Midsouth into the first full weekend of August. However, there will be a few showers across the W Midwest late in the 10-day forecast. The mean position of the high-pressure ridge is further east on the latest run. And the GFS model struggles with ridge riding storm systems and where to place rain until 2-3 days before the storm’s arrival. The more eastern located high-pressure ridge and its clockwise upper air movement offers a better chance of NC Midwest showers. The midday forecast is warm to hot, but not as hot as the overnight run with fewer days of 90–100-degree heat across the N Plains/Minnesota. Highs elsewhere will range from the 90’s to lower 100’s for numerous days. The GFS forecast has rain for Iowa on Aug 9 with totals of 0.5-1.00”. Any Iowa rain will be welcomed!
  • The less threatening Central US weather forecast is allowing corn, soy, and wheat futures to retreat from opening highs. Wheat values are falling on Russian grain sales amid the hope that the corridor will become operational this weekend. We remain bullish, but the midday GFS forecast is less threatening. The big question is whether the EU model will validate the more Eastern US high pressure ridge. The GFS forecast does rebuild the ridge in the 10-15 day period with a new round of searing Midwest heat. So, the midday GFS weather forecast is not calling for a pattern change.
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28 July 2022

  • HEADLINES: Macro markets weather negative GDP data; US forecast stays worrisome into mid-August.
  • Chicago adds weather premium; Energy/equity markets shrug off US economic contraction; GFS weather forecast extends heat/dryness into August 12.
  • Global ag markets are higher at midday as there is no sign that needed rain and cooler temperatures lie in the offing prior to mid-August and as energy and financial markets have weathered this week’s interest rate hike and confirmation that US GDP contracted (by 0.9%) for a second consecutive quarter. The textbook definition of recession is two consecutive quarters of GDP contraction, and there is little doubt that growth challenges lie ahead amid sticky inflationary trends. But the US labour market is strong and consumer spending data suggests that real economic harm is not being felt – right now. The Dow at midday is up 235 points. Spot WTI crude is up $0.50/barrel at $97.70. With the Federal Reserve not meeting again until September, ag markets will be free to trade existing fundamentals, which increasingly includes a rapid decline in Northern Hemisphere corn production, and the potential for sizeable US soybean yield loss.
  • We also note that global canola/rapeseed markets have soared this week, with Paris rapeseed up 8% week on week. Recent strength in wheat and rapeseed markets is noteworthy as both normally find seasonal lows in mid/late summer. To that end, time is also running short to be bearish of US row crop markets.
  • US export sales data is viewed as mixed. Old crop corn sales through the week ending July 2t totalled 6 million bu, vs. 1 million the prior week. Global corn demand has shifted to Brazil. Net soybean cancellations, mostly from China/unknown, of 2 million bu were recorded, which follows positive sales of 7 million bu the previous week. Yet, new crop soy sales were a sizeable 28 million bu, the largest since mid-April. Total new crop US soy commitments, excluding outstanding old crop sales, sit at 585 million bu, the largest since 2014. When including old crop outstanding sales, 2022/23 US soy export commitments are a record large 772 million, or 36% of the USDA’s forecast, with the beginning of the new crop marketing year still 5 weeks away.
  • US wheat sales totalled 15 million bu, vs. 19 million the previous but week but still 4 million above the pace needed to meet the USDA’s forecast. Soyoil sales were 10 million lbs, vs. 1 million the prior week.
  • Confusion surrounding the timing/execution of Ukrainian grain exports continues. Vessels stuck at ports have not yet left, but there is hope movement will be seen in the next 1-2 days. Newswire reports indicate insurance companies, via steep premiums, can handle manoeuvring around mines but concern over Russian noncompliance lingers.
  • Logistics in the south and east of Ukraine will remain challenging indefinitely, and logistics will be compounded as Ukrainian producers work both to harvest a new corn crop as well as transport supplies to ports. A full 30-60 days of vessel line-up data is needed to confirm the success of the export corridor deal.
  • The midday GFS weather forecast is similar to the morning run is keeping meaningful precipitation into mid-August confined to the S Plains, Delta and mid-South. Regional flood risk is elevated in portions of AR, TN and KY. Intense/expansive ridging triggers near complete dryness and dangerous heat across the Central Plains and Western/Upper Midwest August 1-10. GFS max temperature forecasts of 110-115 in KS NE, IA, SD and MN are very likely overdone, but there is less doubt that temperatures will be at/above 100 for some 8-10 consecutive days. Flash drought lies ahead for the western US ag belt, including much of IA.
  • Market fears are now cantered on weather and the potential for sizable yield loss, which follows guaranteed corn yield loss in Europe. Premium will be added, particularly in the soy complex, until signs of a pattern shift emerge. Such a sign is not available today.

27 July 2022

  • HEADLINES: GFS model shows ongoing hot/dry central US weather; Turkey awaits first grain ship to leave Ukraine; Soybeans lead on tight US stocks.
  • Chicago battles the hope for a Ukraine grain export corridor against threatening central US weather and a US bank rate hike.
  • Chicago values are mixed at midday. Traders note that a fundamental battle is taking place in Chicago this morning. The bears are selling wheat on the hope for a reopening of Ukraine grain trade as stranded vessels are led out of the war zone later this week. Turkey confirmed that vessel monitoring has been set up in Istanbul, which means that Ukraine could allow stranded vessels out of the 3 nominated ports as early as Friday. This pressured Chicago/Paris wheat futures after firmer overnight trade on the hope for “additionality” in terms of nearby world wheat supplies.
  • The bulls are buying corn/soybean futures on the hot/dry Central US weather threat and the prospect of declining production. Extreme heat/dryness has caused farmers to abandon corn/sorghum/soybean fields in KS/NE and MO. The damage is done and a US second year for a record corn yield is a longshot.
  • Soybeans will have time to recover if needed rain returns, but the next 2-3 weeks are the most important of the 2022 growing season. Unfortunately, the forecast models are consistent in calling for hot/dry weather across the Plains/W Midwest. US crop conditions/yield prospects are in decline.
  • There has also been cash talk that China has purchased several US August/September soybean cargoes or that they were short futures on basis sales against August soybeans. We cannot find any confirmation of such buying, but the large volume of trade in Nov soybean and December soymeal futures on the opening smacks of new fund inflows. Funds have been exiting Chicago positions for weeks, but amid the ongoing Central US and European weather woes and charts that are breaking trendlines and turning up, they are again looking to the long side of the market. If the US Central Bank were to suggest that they are ever taking their foot off the interest rate breaks, you would find many more fund managers wanting to return to long commodity positions.
  • Chicago brokers report indicate that funds have sold 3,900 contracts of wheat, while buying 6,900 contracts of corn and 7,400 contracts of soybeans. In soy products, funds have bought 5,700 contracts of soymeal and 3,900 contracts of soyoil. Funds are on the long side of soy.
  • The US produced 300 million gallons of ethanol last week, down 4 million gallons from the week prior, but up 1% from last year. The US needs to average 308 million gallons of ethanol production per week to reach the WASDE annual forecast for corn use of 5,375 million bu. We do not look for an ethanol change on August 12, but there could be a modest 10-15 million bu reduction in the Sept WASDE.
  • The midday GFS weather forecast offers limited rain for the N Plains and the NW Midwest over the next 12 days. IA, MN, NE, and the Dakotas hold in an arid trend with warming temperatures. Highs will return to the 90’s to lower 100’s. A high pressure ridge builds northward beyond the weekend and set up residence in the S Midwest/Delta. The ridge is more expansive than prior runs. The cool waters off the SW Canadian coastline should maintain this ridge position. Our concern for Central US corn/soy/sorghum crops is high.
  • There is a hesitancy to be buying commodities too aggressively ahead of the US Central Bank’s rate hike this afternoon. However, the US$ is struggling, and its price performance must be closely followed. US President Biden will be talking to Chinese President Xi overnight. Hopes are building that the US could drop tariffs on Chinese goods, which may unleash additional Chinese demand for US soy/grain. EU/US crop losses are building amid historically tight world stocks. Buy breaks remains our considered advice.

26 July 2022

  • HEADLINES: Central US weather warmer/drier into August 8; China buys Brazilian Aug/Sept soybeans; Chicago close is key today.
  • Chicago higher on threatening Central US/European weather; Market stalls as it worries about Wednesday’s Central US bank rate hike. Midday GFS weather forecast hotter/drier
  • Chicago values are sharply higher at midday following a push above $6.00 in December corn futures and $8.00 in September wheat. Soybean futures followed with August soymeal gaining another $12/ton on the cash premiums paid. Indiana and Ohio crushers are offering spot soymeal at +$60-70.00 over while the Volga Valley crush plant in South Dakota is +$20 over. Even the Iowa rail is offering meal at $45-50 over August which makes August soymeal futures and August soybeans appear to be cheap. August soybean futures have pushed back above $15.00 with first notice day on Friday. The August/December soymeal spread is trading at a strong premium of $54.00.
  • Profit taking was noted on the early Chicago rally with traders betting that open chart gaps could be filled in coming days. The fall in US crop condition ratings sparked a gap opening overnight which makes today’s close important. A close in the upper end of the price range would prove bullish, while a lower closer would argue for additional sideways trade. Chicago futures have had a history of higher Monday trade with values then sliding into Friday. A break in this recent price pattern would argue that seasonal lows are being formed.
  • Chicago brokers report that funds have bought 5,100 contracts of wheat, 8,900 contracts of corn, and 6,400 contracts of soybeans. In soy products, funds have bought 4,300 contracts of soymeal and 1,100 contracts of soyoil.
  • The Ukraine is preparing to allow stranded vessels to start dodging ocean mines in a corridor out of its war zone late this week. It is estimated that some 22-24 vessels are stranded in the 3 ports that will produce the Ukraine export corridor. The quality of the grain on these vessels is said to poor following months of demurrage. It will take at least a week before all these stranded vessels can leave Ukraine waters.  Loading grain on incoming vessels will be a challenge. Export facility owners do not want to place their people in harm’s way while vessel owners stay clear of the area for the same rationale. However, ADM’s CEO indicated that he was optimistic on the Ukraine grain export corridor. Time will tell, but the size of the ships will be down with few wanting to make the trek into the Black Sea
  • US sorghum yield/supplies will be cut substantially this year amid the Plains drought. The US planted 6.3 million acres of sorghum in 2022 with harvested acres estimated at 5.4 million. This means that each bu of yield loss amounts to 5.4 million bu. Crop scouts estimate the US sorghum yield closer to 56 bushels/acre or a crop cut of 71 million bu. The production loss may not seem like much, but amid the area’s corn shortage, cash basis bids for grain will stay stout.
  • China booked 2-3 cargoes of Brazilian soybeans for August-September. China continues to seek Brazilian soybeans when they can. Basis levels for both corn and soybeans are rising in Brazil on strong demand. EU demand for Brazilian corn is active.
  • The midday GFS weather forecast offers limited rain for the N Plains and the NW Midwest over the next 12 days. IA, MN, NE, and the Dakotas hold in an arid trend with warming temperatures following the weekend. Highs will return to the 90’s to lower 100’s which will push crop maturity. A high-pressure ridge is forecast to build northward beyond the weekend and set up residence in the E Midwest. This ridge fans dryness and extreme heat for the Plains/W Midwest with highs projected from the mid 90’s to the lower 100’s.   The mean ridge position is further east, across the Midwest. The cooler waters off the SW Canadian coastline could maintain this Ridge position. Our concern for Central US corn, soybean and sorghum crops is rising amid the midday run that was warmer/drier.
  • Sliding stock/energy markets tugged Chicago values off their early morning highs. However, the Central US weather threat is too great for any widespread selling. August Central US/European weather will direct Chicago valuations. Cash market basis strength tells you that futures have discounted/digested a considerable amount of bearish economic news. Stay bullish, each new weather model run looks more concerning. Iowa/Minnesota/Nebraska weather during August is key.

25 July 2022

  • HEADLINES: Debate over the Ukraine grain export corridor; Russian interior wheat price; GFS hot/dry beyond day 9.
  • Chicago higher on debate over Ukraine grain export profile; US crop yields and the central US bank lending hike of 0.75 basis points on Wednesday.
  • Chicago values are higher at midday and are following prior week price trends in which there is a rally to start the week with selling pressure mid to late week. Key to deciphering whether seasonal lows are being formed will be Chicago price action this week. Can Chicago values hold, or will they again decline into Friday. A rally on the start of the week that allows for steady or firming grain prices into the close would be an indication that wheat/corn are close to seasonal lows. Soybean values are a function of August weather and Chinese demand. There are rumours that China has booked 2-3 cargoes of Brazilian soybeans for August and are back asking for US offers for October/November. We look for a higher Chicago close and that weekly crop condition ratings will decline 1-2% for US corn/soybeans, while holding steady in spring wheat.
  • Chicago brokers report that funds have bought 3,400 contracts of wheat, 5,900 contracts of corn, and 6,700 contracts of soybeans. In soy products, funds have bought 5,300 contracts of soymeal while being flat in soyoil.
  • The world grain industry is debating how much grain can Ukraine export if the Russian’s allow the export corridor to be open. There are 50-54 grain vessels that have been caught behind the mines/blockades of Ukrainian ports. Of the 3 ports that are trying to open via Friday’s agreement, some 21-24 vessels could be allowed to sail. This could occur as early as next week. No measure of grain quality is being offered on these ships, but since the ships have been standing at port since March and now enduring the heat of summer, it is doubtful that wheat/corn will make the grade specified in the original sales contracts.
  • The UN/FAO and Ukraine Government has estimated that it will be able to export as much as 5.0 million mt of grain per month due if the export corridor deal. Industry sources are far less optimistic based on the war, the reluctance of vessel owners to let their ships enter a war zone with insurance companies will not be willing to offer coverage or charging exorbitant rates. Private sources estimate that 2.6-3.0 million mt of grain in total could flow out of Ukraine in the best of circumstances, which compares to 1.5-1.9 million mt of grain/month heading through the EU. The real help could be the cost of domestic transit which will raise the local price bid to Ukraine farmers. At best, the 3 Ukraine ports will be able to ship 2.0 million mt of grain/month which along with 1.0 million into Europe is where the maximum monthly export paces are derived from. Such Ukraine export volumes indicate that world grain prices are too cheap.
  • For the week ending July 21, the US shipped 28.5 million bu of corn, 14.2 million bu of soybeans and 17.5 million bu of wheat. Corn/soybean exports were disappointing.
  • Russian interior cash wheat prices are rising with the estimated cost of replacement put at $365/mt, up $25/mt in the past 2 weeks. And Russian wheat quality is struggling amid the forecast for soaking rains of 2-3.50” over the harvest areas. Russian wheat protein quality is in fast retreat.
  • The midday GFS weather forecast is further south with rains over the next 10 days which assures that IA, MN, NE, and the Dakotas hold in an arid trend. The good news is that temperatures will be seasonal with highs in the 80’s to the lower 90’s. Rains were also be reduced across KS, AR and MO with totals of 0.5-1.50” with soaking rain of 2-4.00” slated for TN/KY. A period of hot/dry weather follows with a high-pressure ridge residing across the Midwest. The 10–15-day GFS model has made these hot/dry weather forecasts before to no avail this summer which leaves forecasters/traders sceptical. If correct, the forecast would return mid 90’s to lower 100’s to the Midwest.
  • The E Midwest cash soybean meal market is hot and Argentine crushers are not able to pry soybeans away from producers amid Argentine inflation of 80-90%. August meal shorts will cover into first notice day. Chicago corn/wheat markets will focus on Ukraine export potential and can the corridor agreement be properly executed. This may require a few weeks for certainty. Our stance is bullish into late 2022.

21 July 2022

  • HEADLINES: Paris wheat pushes to strong gain; UN head to Turkey; GFS drier at midday.
  • Chicago markets are mixed at midday with the summer row crops of corn/soybeans lower while the wheat market holds in the green. Improved Central US weather and lacklustre export demand has pressured Chicago corn/soy futures to key chart support. World wheat prices trend higher on improving import demand and the slowing US winter wheat harvest.
  • We look for a mixed Chicago close as the European Central Bank raised its bank lending rate by 0.5%, its first hike in 11 years. The US$ weakened following the EU rate increase with WTI crude oil values falling $4.00/barrel to $95.00.
  • The US Central Bank will raise its rates next week which has sparked worry about a coming US recession. Thereafter, the next US Central Bank rate increase won’t occur until September, so raw material asset prices could catch a bullish tailwind late next week. Our research argues that Chicago grain futures are mispriced relative to their fundamentals. However, a sustained recovery must be led by the cash grain market and tightening future supplies.
  • Chicago brokers estimate that managed money has sold 2,500 contracts of corn, 3,600 contracts of soybeans, 2,900 contracts of soyoil, and 1,100 contracts of meal. Funds have bought 4,500 contracts of wheat.
  • FGIS reported that for the week ending July 14 that the US sold 18.8 million bu of wheat, 1.3 million bu of old crop and 22.4 million bu of new crop corn, and 7.5 million bu of old and 9.4 million bu of new crop soybeans. This was the first week of the past 3 that USDA did not report net soybean cancellations.
  • For their respective crop years to date, the US has sold 279 million bu of wheat (the same rate as last year), 2.380 million bu of corn (down 367 million or 13%), and 2,190 million bu of soybeans (down 88 million or 4%). China did secure a cargo of US corn last week.
  • The Russian wheat harvest is sizeable, and maybe record large at 87.5-89.5 million mt. However, wheat quality is being questioned amid low protein levels. The low protein levels could push world hard wheat buyers to Northern Europe or Argentina. The US may also find increased HRW demand on quality.
  • UN Secretary General Gutterres will be heading to Turkey this afternoon for the hopeful signing of the Black Sea Grain Intervention pact in the coming days. There are details that have yet to be worked out but hope for a signed deal can happen on any day. However, we remain sceptical about the logistics to export sizeable quantities of Ukraine grain in a war zone.
  • Paris wheat futures closed sharply higher with gains of €10.75/mt or some $0.295/bu if related back to Chicago in $/bushels. EU wheat crop estimates are being cut by another 1.4-2.1 million mt due to hot/dry weather conditions across N Europe. More important is that EU corn crop estimates are in a freefall from those that surveyed fields to 55-56 million mt, a 17% yield fall from trend.
  • The midday GFS weather forecast is drier for the Plains and the W Midwest compared to recent forecasts. The midday GFS forecast has cut back rain prospects by 40-50% and reduced coverage to 45-55% of the area. This leaves some significant areas of the W Midwest and Plains needing rain. S Minnesota and portions of Iowa must be closely watched. The latest forecast reflects a high pressure ridge forming across the SE US and retrograding west into the Central Midwest. A period of heat/dryness looms which makes the coming rains important.
  • It is a macro day in a host of markets with the volume of trade in decline. Chicago has not traded its own fundamentals for some weeks. EU crop losses are sizeable and important to world trade flows of grain. Chicago values have become too cheap!

20 July 2022

  • HEADLINES: Lacklustre trade in Chicago; GFS allows heat/dryness to return early August.
  • Low volume, lacklustre trade in Chicago; wheat fully digested Black Sea uncertainty; position of Central US ridging of incredible interest.
  • Chicago markets are mixed in meagre volume, with modest selling/liquidation ongoing in corn and soy and wheat finding support despite Tuesday’s news that Europe will begin the relaxation of sanctions on select Russian banks. Perhaps coincidentally, wheat has found support almost exactly at pre-Russian invasion levels, and our works suggests that spot Chicago is fairly valued at $8.00, even assuming Russian exports of 40 million mt. And there is much unknown as to how much grain Russian can ship on a weekly basis given the exporters’ inability to hedge forward tax risks. Russian flour prices remain perched near record highs, and so the wheat export tax is highly unlikely to be eliminated in 2022.
  • Outside markets are similarly lacking conviction. Spot WTI crude is flat at $104/barrel. The Dow is up 80 points as the market’s fears that Nord Stream 1 remains closed eases slightly.
  • Vessel insurance companies have responded to ongoing talk of establishing a grain corridor by demanding assurance that Ukrainian vessels will be accompanied by third-party Naval ships and that mines are cleared. Concrete details surrounding the timing and execution of any corridor establishment remain absent. The ongoing blockading of Ukrainian ports will have a more significant impact on wheat trade flows as Ukraine’s wheat surplus sits in the heart of the conflict currently.
  • Weekly EIA data leans slightly positive corn and ethanol and neutral to bearish gasoline. US ethanol production through the week ending July 15 totalled 304 million gallons vs. 295 million the previous week and up 1% on the same week in 2021. Ethanol stocks fell a modest 2 million gallons amid larger residual/export disappearance. Cumulative US ethanol residual disappearance in 2022 sits at 1,110 million gallons, up 14% year on year, and strong exports are anticipated to be revealed in June and July once Census data is available. Cash ethanol production margins remains positive, with ethanol prices this week up $0.04-0.11/gallon.
  • US gasoline disappearance last week totalled 8.5 million barrels/day, up sharply from the prior week but down 13% from last year. Elevated gasoline prices have, generally speaking, slowed consumption but the recent break in retail prices is expected to encourage/sustain late summer holiday plans. Overall, the US energy markets remains imbalanced, with crude stocks still the lowest for July since 2014 despite the release of some 84 million barrels of strategic reserves.
  • The midday GFS weather forecast is similar to the overnight run in projected a brief hiatus from extreme heat and complete dryness across the Central Plains/W Midwest. Yet, it is highly probable that the position of high-pressure ridging returns to the Southern and Central Plains beginning July 31 due to deep negative soil moisture anomalies, which are typically the source of extreme heat. Plains temperatures drop into the 70s and 80s in the 6–10-day period, but a pattern of warmth and dryness resumes thereafter. The best chance of Central US rainfall occurs July 26-28, with cumulative totals of 1-2” offered to E NE, S IA, KY and the E Midwest. Unfortunately, this appears to be just an interlude in an otherwise dry climate setup.
  • Markets will continue to struggle for conviction amid macro/geopolitical uncertainty. However, the failure of soaking rain to appear in August mandates the addition of weather premium. Corn yield loss of 10-15% relative to trend is increasingly likely across the Plains/SW Midwest.

19 July 2022

  • HEADLINES: Chicago mostly weaker; GFS weather forecast trends cooler in extended range; Egypt cancels wheat tender.
  • Egypt’s GASC cancels Sunday tender, to announce new direct tender Tuesday including Russia/Europe. risk off ahead of Russian decision on Nord Stream restart. Central US rainfall debate in 10-15 day period.
  • Chicago grain prices fell to sharp losses at midday on the forecast of improving Central US weather and the fear that the US$ could rally sharply if Russia does not turn on the gas following the maintenance of the Nord Stream pipeline. The US$ is weaker at midday, but macroeconomic concerns have been directing Chicago prices since the last 10 days of June. The back and forth of the market has limited trader/fund participation in recent days. We look for a lower close without conviction as the trade worries about sluggish US export sales for the third week in a row. Weekly US ethanol production, to be released Wednesday, will also be uneventful amid current large stocks and difficulties sourcing remaining old crop supplies from the producer. Uncertainties abound.
  • Egypt’s GASC cancelled its tender for North and South American and Australian wheat supplies. This was not completely unexpected as it was suspected GASC was simply checking on non-EU and non-Black Sea cash prices. Recall there have been few to no offers from the Americas and Australia in recent tenders. However, GASC will buy additional wheat via direct deals on July 20, and our work suggest Egypt is wise to boost supply coverage into latter part of autumn. A purchase of US SRW remains possible following Egypt’s lowering of moisture standards and as US Gulf SRW remains comparable to EU origin.
  • There remain many unknowns over the near-term creation of an export corridor in the Black Sea. Europe will reportedly ease sanctions placed upon Russian banks in order to facilitate the movement of grain and fertiliser more easily. Otherwise, Putin stated he expects additional talks over the safe passage of Ukrainian grain, but no other details are available.
  • We do note that Russian interior cash wheat prices are up sharply this week amid strength in the Ruble. Best guesses on Russian fob wheat sit at $375/mt for late summer and autumn, and based on current interior prices, downside risk is low when accounting for normal costs/freight and an export tax of $85/mt. Russian wheat is not overly cheap an sits some $10/mt above hi-pro wheat in Germany and the Baltics. Black Sea exports will stay challenged for some time.
  • The midday GFS weather forecast is much warmer in the Plains, MO and IA this week, but has added rainfall to NE and the E Midwest beyond July 26 as the mean position of high-pressure ridging meanders into the Southeast. If verified, this will allow for regionally better rain chances across the eastern half of the US Ag Belt. This will also allow temperatures to moderate to more normal levels in the 8–15-day period. We would advise caution into putting too much faith on weather details beyond 5-7 days amid fluctuating model performance, but in the last 18 hours, forecasts have trended cooler/wetter in late July.
  • Markets appear to be finding some measure of near-term equilibrium at $5.80-6.20, Dec corn, $13.20-14.00, Nov soy, and $8.00, Chicago wheat. Stability in wheat is notable given the time of year and wheat will be the first to score a lasting bottom. It is critical that mild temperatures and regular rain are established well into late August following recent heat and rapid soil moisture loss across the Plains/SW Midwest and mid-South. We remain sceptical that the US weather pattern changes outright prior into late summer.

18 July 2022

  • HEADLINES: Macro markets in recovery mode; GFS weather forecast stays hot; Global uncertainty ramps up.
  • Chicago grain prices are sharply higher at noon as traders react to sliding Northern Hemisphere grain production due to extreme heat while a sinking US$ sparks a fresh appetite for risk. The volume of Chicago trade has expanded on the morning rally with short covering noted in wheat.
  • Crude oil, raw material and equity markets are all moving in tandem with the US Central Bank telegraphing that it will raise its lending rate by 0.75% on July 28. Whether Russia turns on the gas to Europe through the Nord Stream pipeline looms large on Thursday. No gas would produce a threatening structural event for the EU with winter ahead and their economy moving closer to recession. And Ukraine is becoming pessimistic on Russia’s adherence to its security concern regarding the grain export corridor. Russian troops are slowing seizing a larger share of Southern Ukraine and Kiev cannot allow losing the port of Odessa. We remain sceptical that a UN deal can be brokered and more importantly work amid the ongoing hostilities of war. Russia’s weekend ramp up of rocket strikes of Odessa and Central Ukraine does not bode well for a pact to be signed later this week or next.
  • Chicago brokers estimate that funds have bought 7,300 contracts of wheat, 8,800 contracts of soybeans, and 6,600 of corn. In soyoil, funds have bought 7,300 contacts of soyoil and 1,900 contacts of soymeal. Funds have been on the buy side across Chicago since the opening.
  • There has been talk that China has booked 6-8 cargoes of Brazilian soybeans for February/March. China crush margins are positive in the back end of the market, and they are taking coverage of S American supply. There have been rumours that the US sold a few cargoes in that same position, but we cannot confirm the trade. However, China’s return to securing new crop soybeans is welcomed following weeks of modest buying,
  • US weekly export inspections for the week ending July 14 were mostly uneventful, though the US does remain active in shipping previously purchased bushels of corn. Corn inspections through the period totalled 42 million bu, vs. 38 million the previous week and unchanged from the same week in 2021. Soybean inspections were 13 million bu, fractionally higher than the previous week. Wheat inspections were a meagre 7 million bu, vs. 11 million the prior week.
  • For their respective crop years to date, exporters have inspected for export 1,980 million bu of corn, down 17% from last year, 1,930 million bu of soybeans, down 9%, and 77 million bu of wheat, down 23%. Yet, given the discrepancy between inspections and Census, weekly corn inspections of 33-34 million are required to meet the USDA’s forecast.
  • The midday GFS weather forecast is similar to the morning release in featuring meandering high pressure aloft the Central US throughout the next two weeks. Scattered showers will continue to ride along the northern and eastern edges of this ridge, with the best rain chances offered to the far pockets of MN, IA and OH into July 28. Precipitation accumulation elsewhere will fall well short of evaporation rates as max temperatures across the Plains and Delta reach into the upper 90s/low 100s on a daily basis. The GFS forecast maintains max temperatures upwards of 104-115 degrees in TX, OK, KS and NE as early as Wednesday. Unfortunately, there is not yet any indication that this upper air pattern will be disrupted.
  • Uncertainty abounds! Mother Nature will be stripping yield potential from Europe and a sizeable portion of the US corn/soy belt, while macro concerns will continue indefinitely as questions over Black Sea grain exports and European energy supplies will go unanswered until at least late this week. It is unlikely that a lasting trend is established until late Jul/early August, but we continue to advise users to add to coverage on these price corrections.

15 July 2022

  • LIFFE closes attached. Once again, despite earlier suggesting otherwise, I have found a short window in which to gather together my daily market views as follows-
  • HEADLINES: Wheat sags on Russian willingness to sign export corridor pact; GFS midday forecast blazing hot for Midwest/Delta/Plains.
  • Tug of war between sagging wheat and summer row crop values that want to add premium for the coming extreme heat across the Plains/SW and W Midwest. NOPA crush data released early.
  • Chicago grain prices are mixed in light volume with the wild swings of the market exhausting traders. Supportive is the decline in the US$ and the surge in the US stock market as economists argue that the pre-recessionary decline in a host of financial and raw material markets has digested a moderate recession. The fall in US and world financial markets has been due to the fear of a coming US recession as the US and world Central Banks battle inflation. The fear has produced something of a collapse in commodity values over the past 3 weeks.
  • However, blast furnace heat is forecast across the Central US including the Plains, Midwest, and Delta according to the midday GFS weather model. It is a supply balancing act of how much has been lost in the Western US and can it be offset by improved weather in the NE Midwest. Showers are falling across N Illinois/S Wisconsin at midday. We fear that based upon the US weather forecast, US corn/soybean yields will be below trend. It is just a question of how far. Plains irrigation systems just can’t keep up with corn moisture needs. The Midday GFS weather forecast is brutally hot.
  • Chicago brokers estimate that funds have sold 9,500 contracts of wheat and 2,800 contracts of soybeans, while buying 3,400 contracts of corn. In soy products, funds have bought 4,700 contracts of soyoil and sold 3,200 contracts of meal.
  • FAS/USDA confirmed that China booked 2 cargoes of US corn (133,000 mt) for 2022/23. This helps confirm cash connected rumours of several days ago that private Chinese buyers were securing US corn. When China’s state buyers will secure US corn is unknown, but since Brazilian corn can’t be imported until 2023 from its next seedings, the US will gain most of the demand. WASDE has China taking just 18.0 million mt of world corn in 2022/23, which is down from the past few years. We Could argue that China will import 23-28 million mt, which would further tighten world corn stocks. The import margin of US corn into China is sizeable and hog feeders are making a profit.
  • NOPA reported a June soybean crush rate of 164.8 million bu, down 6.3 million from May (May had one more day of crush), but up 12.3 million bu from last year’s NOPA crush of 152.4 million bu. US soyoil stocks declined to 1.767 billion pounds, the smallest US soyoil end stock total since September. Biofuel demand for US soyoil stays strong amid strong margins. The fall in soyoil price has pushed renewable diesel demand to record large levels. The report was bullish soyoil.
  • How much could the Black Sea Grain Corridor agreement raise Ukraine wheat and corn exports in the 2022/23 crop year? USDA sees Ukraine exporting 10.0 million mt of wheat and 9.0 million mt of corn in their July WASDE. Due to lower transit cost, grain exports will be reduced through E Europe and move out of 3 functioning Ukraine ports if logistically open. The partial opening of Black Sea ports would allow Ukraine wheat exports to grow from 10 to 12.5 million mt and corn from 9.0 to 13.5-14.0 million mt. Chicago wheat values have been an elevator up-and-down with key support found at $7.50 on the spot weekly chart.
  •  Spot CBOT Wheat Weekly Chart:

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<li>Midday GFS weather comment: The best chance for rain is over the next 48 hours as ridge riding storm system pushes through the Eastern US. Rain totals should range from 0.25-1.25”. A dry weather pattern follows with blazing heat shifting from the Plains into the Delta/Midwest. The GFS forecast places an incredibly strong high-pressure ridge across the Mid-Mississippi Valley which propagates blast furnace heat across; MO, IA, AR, TN, KY and the southern halves of IL, IN, and OH into July 30. Unknown is whether the GFS forecast has the ridge too far to the east, but this is a highly concerning and extremely hot Midwest forecast.</li>
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<li>It is the hottest time of summer, but the midday GFS forecast has extreme heat that includes the Delta/E Midwest into the end of July with highs in the 90’s to lower 100’s. One does not know whether the model is crying wolf, but if correct, acute heat stress would be placed on corn/soy crops as the drought builds across the Plains/W Midwest. Don’t be short heading into Monday if the GFS weather forecast is even half correct, it is just that hot!</li>
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