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July 2010 Archive for MGEX Research

RSS By: Joe Victor, AgWeb.com

Joe Victor is a Business Development Specialist with Minneapolis Grain Exchange, Inc., where he monitors cash grain activity and cash grain opportunities. He provides marketing advice through this blog.

2010 Weather is A Lot Like

Jul 29, 2010
Allendale Inc was informed this week that weather thus far in 2010 is similar to the weather of 1998 and 1983. Our first reaction was to check yield and the season average farm price recorded by USDA as it is what is traded. Please view this chart.
            Before we get to the meat of the matter, take a good look at the corn yield and SAFP just from 1998 to present day July as corn yield has increased 26% and the SAFP has increased dramatically from $2.15 to $3.75. Chalk up the big increase in the season average farm price in 2010 as corn is not only used for feed, food and exports but growingly now for fuel. Soybean yield from 1998 to present day has been 8.6% as research dollars find its way into the corn first and foremost.
            You are able to see how weather increased the corn yield and decreased the SAFP from the month of July into the January annual report but had a reverse impact in 1983. Insert your thoughts of genetically modified organisms here as a big difference maker between 1983 into 1998 and into 2010.
            You can look at the yield for soybeans and see how both in 1998 and 1983, it went lower. My question is not corn and soybeans grown in the same region and is weather more important for beans than corn?
            It is time to yield check your corn and make certain you are hedged at the level your marketing plan suggest. Soybean weather is key for the last week of July and the first two weeks of August. As long as pod fill moves forward rather than backwards, increased hedges on new crop may be placed.  
 
 
 
We welcome your questions.........Joe Victor
 
Allendale Inc welcomes any questions you may have by calling 800-551-4626 or
 
Web Special <click here>
 
 
 
 
The thoughts expressed and the basic data from which they are drawn are believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed. Any opinions expressed herein are subject to change without notice. Hypothetical or simulated performance results have certain inherent limitations. Simulated results do not represent actual trading. Simulated trading programs are subject to the benefit of hindsight. No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those shown. Commodity trading may not be suitable for recipients of this publication. This is not a solicitation of the purchase or sale of any commodities. Those acting on this information are responsible for their own actions. Any republication, or other use of this information and thoughts expressed herein without the written permission of Allendale, Inc., is strictly prohibited. Allendale Inc. c2010

The Major Players

Jul 16, 2010
Allendale Inc is convinced one of the biggest barriers the corn market needed to hurdle is the lack of yield variability for our second biggest user which is the ethanol market. Take a hard look at the steady 22.1% increase in corn yield on a per acre basis since 1999/2000’s to the present day. Compare the USA lack of yield variability vs that of another major player Argentina’s 12% reduction year on year.
            Allendale Inc presents to you the bushels per acre for other significant players and it should come as little surprise just how extreme the USA is vs the other major players.
            We have added another significant measure in the form of days supply after all usage is met and it should come as little surprise how the country with the smallest 38 day supply is feeding the world’s major holder of corn and 136 day supply of China!
            Brazil, Argentina, and South Africa all have a bigger supply than the USA and certainly not bigger than China. All four of the countries are doing well with a bigger cushion than the USA however the biggest single exporter in the world remains the USA and then Argentina.
            Allendale suggest the yield per acre variability is not as big of an issue as ethanol has taken over. In a recent Reuters corn yield poll Allendale Inc and Farm Futures rank as the highest with 167 bushels per acre and Goldman Sachs ranks as the lowest at 158.8 bpa vs last years 164.7 bpa. Our yield models do take into account the condition of the crop as well as many other factors. We should explain there have been more than two thirds of the time dating back to 1986 when good to excellent conditions are lower than the present 73% and 10% higher than the most recent five year average. Excluding this year, there have been two years since 1999/2000 when yield per acre was lower than the previous year within the USA, five years for Argentina, four for Brazil, five for South Africa and four for China.
            Allendale Inc continues to advise the producer to keep control of the grain and maintain your marketing plan.
 
We welcome your questions.........Joe Victor
 
Allendale Inc welcomes any questions you may have by calling 800-551-4626 or
 
Web Special <click here>
 
 
 
 
The thoughts expressed and the basic data from which they are drawn are believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed. Any opinions expressed herein are subject to change without notice. Hypothetical or simulated performance results have certain inherent limitations. Simulated results do not represent actual trading. Simulated trading programs are subject to the benefit of hindsight. No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those shown. Commodity trading may not be suitable for recipients of this publication. This is not a solicitation of the purchase or sale of any commodities. Those acting on this information are responsible for their own actions. Any republication, or other use of this information and thoughts expressed herein without the written permission of Allendale, Inc., is strictly prohibited. Allendale Inc. c2010

One Year in Particular:

Jul 08, 2010
                 Allendale Inc asked several multi-state agronomist what is most important to an annual corn crop and received the same response, “they are all important, but you can not have the others without the most important and that is planting pace”. Allendale Inc went back to 1987 and tried to find as many years possible which had similar planting pace, good to excellent condition and percent of silk and found one year which matches pretty close to 2010.
            The year we found was 2004 with a 3% better planting pace than the 81% which 2010 held on May 9th. Present good to excellent crop conditions as of July 4th 2010 are 71% vs the 73% in 2004. The percent silk as of July 4th 2010 was 19% identical to 2004. We looked at a host of other years since 1987 but only 2004 came close to what is developing in 2010.
            The present domestic stocks for corn are 1.573 billion and in 2004 end stocks for the June WASDE were 741 million bushels (in July revised upward by 250 million bushels). USDA had an excellent pace of planting, good to excellent condition ratings and percent of silk but did not raise its yield per acre of 145. Allendale Inc suggest USDA is unlikely to raise its yield per acre in the July WASDE report released the morning of July 9th.
            The only similarities for weather in 2004 was a wetter and cooler than average summer, comparable to the summer of 2010.
In 2004 Dec futures were able to stage a rally of 8.8% during the summer with 2010 rallying 15.5% and then sold off into 2004 Dec futures expiration.
            Just one idea you may want to consider is as follows: buy a 390 Dec put, sell a 340 put and sell a 450 call, for seven cents. The range of per acre return is $627.12 if corn futures were to be $3/bu and $826.70 if corn futures were to reach $4.50/bu. Allendale Inc has representatives which can explain our “Evaluator” for your particular business.
            Questions you may want to ask are does planting pace, conditions and % silking matter to you and or the market? What if any marketing plan have you implemented? Do you have complete control of your risk?
            Give theses questions and more you may have before USDA releases its July WASDE.
 
We welcome your questions.........Joe Victor
 
Allendale Inc welcomes any questions you may have by calling 800-551-4626 or
 
Web Special <click here>
 
 
 
 
The thoughts expressed and the basic data from which they are drawn are believed to be reliable but cannot be guaranteed. Any opinions expressed herein are subject to change without notice. Hypothetical or simulated performance results have certain inherent limitations. Simulated results do not represent actual trading. Simulated trading programs are subject to the benefit of hindsight. No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those shown. Commodity trading may not be suitable for recipients of this publication. This is not a solicitation of the purchase or sale of any commodities. Those acting on this information are responsible for their own actions. Any republication, or other use of this information and thoughts expressed herein without the written permission of Allendale, Inc., is strictly prohibited. Allendale Inc. c2010
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