- HEADLINES: Chicago soars on Midwest drought expansion; US soyoil stocks tighten despite enlarged production.
- Chicago ag markets are sharply higher as the trade more intently adds weather premium to values amid recent and upcoming Midwest drought expansion as key areas of Northern Europe and Ukraine are likely to see net soil moisture loss into the first half of summer. Each day that passes without hints of a pattern change becomes more worries as some measure of corn across the Southern Midwest will begin pollinating in the first week of July. Dryness was on the market’s radar in early June, but the reality of eroding crop potential is now present. One must stay open to improved rainfall in June, but as mentioned previously, there is just no sign of a pattern change in two-week forecasts, and the need for rain is immediate.
- US weekly export sales were unexciting, with corn sales through the week ending June 8 totalling 11 million bu, soybeans 18 million bu (most of which was known), and wheat 6 million bu. But surprising demand for US origin soybeans so late in the season, and despite very cheap Brazilian offers, is noteworthy.
- Other fresh input leans supportive. The Brazilian Real this morning has fallen to a newer 12-month low and Brazil’s currency works to keep new crop production margins rather tight.
- Spot Brazilian corn in US dollars has stabilised at $4.80/bu, vs. early June’s low of $4.60. We also note that Dec Chicago oats has rallied nearly 70 cents in the last week and at midday sits above $4.00/bu for the first time since September 2022. The EU grain market has been more tepid in adding risk premium amid wetter forecasts offered to France and parts of Germany in the next 10 days, though we question if coming rainfall there will boost yield potential, with May 15-June 15 rainfall in N Europe recorded at just 5-30% of normal.
- NOPA-member soybean crush in May totalled 177.9 million bu, a record for the month (by far) and up 7 million bu from last year. Year-to-date NOPA crush sits 1,581 million bu, up 6 million on last year and which validates USDA’s annual forecast. US soy stocks are unlikely to exceed 230 million bu given recent improved export demand, and every bushel of yield is critical. And most importantly, NOPA soyoil production in May fell 85 million lbs short of consumption, with total soyoil disappearance in May at 2.20 billion lbs, a record for the month. Chicago Soyoil has resumed a demand-led bull trend.
- 57% of the US corn crop and 51% of the US soy crop are experiencing drought currently. Should 10-day forecasts verify, we expect these numbers to rise slightly next week amid the lack of precipitation offered to southern IL. We maintain that the principal market risk near-term is the loss of 500-700 million bu of corn production relative to USDA’s forecast, and this requires just 10% yield loss from trend in IA, IL and Great Lakes.
- Recall USDA forecasts a 16 million mt gain in global corn stocks in 2023/24, but a US yield below 174 bushels/acre wipes this out completely. We reiterate that it is the location of expanding drought that is so concerning. Soybean yields face the same trimming on a percentage basis if dryness is extended into mid-July.
- The midday GFS weather forecast is drier in IL and IN but otherwise similar to the overnight run. The primary Corn Belt will be left arid into June 25, while soaking rain aids crop potential, but slows wheat harvesting, across the Central Plains. The GFS forecast is less expansive with high pressure ridging in the 12–14-day period, which allows scattered showers to the dot the E Midwest Jun 28-30, but confidence beyond event 5-7 days remains extremely low.
- Weather drives price discovery on an hourly and daily basis. We continue to expect extreme volatility into August, but without a shift in the US climate by early July, Brazil’s record corn and soy crops may not be big enough. An outright weather trend change is needed to sustain corrections near-term.
