- HEADLINES: LDC crush plant in Claypool IN endures fire; Soyoil/soybean fob premiums rise in Brazil; US weather coming into focus.
- Summer row crop futures are rallying while wheat sags in reduced Chicago trade volume. The war of disinformation between Russia/western world has left traders in a difficult position to assess the geopolitical risks of Russia invading Ukraine ahead of a 3-day US holiday weekend. Chicago will be closed on Monday for observance of the US President Day holiday. Any Russian invasion of Ukraine would cause a sharp rise in Chicago values with traders suggesting that wheat, soyoil and corn would pace the rally with near limit gains. Russia/Ukraine account for +30% of the world’s wheat, sunoil and barley trade. And the Ukraine is the world’s third largest corn exporter.
- Amid deepening bullish fundamentals, the bears will choose to close out short positions due to the extended weekend. And the USDA will hold its Annual Outlook Forum next week with WASDE new crop balance sheets to be released on Friday morning. The uncertainty over Russia and the prospect for tightening new crop end stocks has caused end users to buy the dip. We note that WASDE does a relatively good job in pegging new crop US seeded acres, but end stock totals are more dependent on summer weather/yield.
- Chicago brokers estimate that managed money has secured 3,400 contracts of corn and 5,600 contracts of soybeans, while selling a net 900 contracts of wheat. In the products, funds have bought 2,500 soyoil and 3,400 contracts of soymeal.
- An LDC soy crush plant in Claypool Indiana endured a fire last evening. Damage is still being assessed. The plant is the largest US producer of glycerine and started operation in 2007. The plant had the ability to crush more than 50 million bu of soybeans annually and was a biodiesel producer. The LDC Claypool plant is closed today for soybean delivery and traders will be closely watching damage assessments to gauge the impact on coming US soymeal and soyoil supplies going forward.
- Mato Grosso’s IMEA reported a record January soybean crush of 842,100 mt. This was a 7% increase from last year due to strong margins as the new crop harvest started. Currently, IMEA estimates that 60.5% of the soy crop has been cut as of Friday. December’s crush was also a record amid strong local demand. Brazilian crushers are outbidding exporters for supply as Brazilian soy crop size projections decline. Private estimates for the 2022 Brazilian soy harvest have fallen to 122 million mt, put out by Patria Agronegocios following their tour.
- Chicago March soyoil futures are testing contract highs at $66.60-66.92. A close above $66.90 sets a new upside price objective of $73-74. Brazilian cash soyoil is tight with reports that export availability is limited through March. The fall of 20 million mt of Brazilian soy crop has caused the loss of nearly 4.0 million mt of soyoil supply, a massive tonnage. And this estimate does not include Paraguay/Argentina crop losses where the drought is deepening. The world cannot endure such massive soyoil losses amid expanding US renewable diesel demand and the shortage of other vegoils. Soyoil should score new highs in 2022.
- The midday GFS weather forecast is like the overnight run with rains across Buenos Aires of 0.4-1.50” with totals of 0.1-0.6” across the remainder of Argentina during the middle of next week. S Brazil is forecast to see 0.3-1.25” late next week before a new round of drying. Temperatures will be warm to hot ahead of the rains with highs in the 90’s/lower 100’s. Too much rain continues to fall across N Brazil which is slowing the harvest.
- Soyoil basis is soaring in Brazil with reported trades at 5-6 cents over amid tight supplies for March. The Paranagua soybean paper market traded $1.35 over, a new high for the harvest season as export demand is growing. Crude oil values look to keep rising with new upside targets of $110-115/barrel. The risk for Chicago bio crops is to the upside heading into the 3-day US holiday weekend.