High Prices Usually Cure High Prices, But Are These Prices High Enough?

This article discusses a recent trade I made to sell some of my old crop corn.

Jon Scheve
Jon Scheve
(Marketing Against The Grain)

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Market Commentary for 3/25/22

Futures values are similar to Midwest weather, if you don’t like what is happening today wait until tomorrow and it will change. For the week:

  • July corn finished up 22 cents at a new high of nearly $7.35
  • December corn finished up 24 cents near $6.70, which is only 3 cents from its record high on Wednesday
  • November finished up 30 cents, just shy of $15
  • July wheat finished up 52 cents, just below $11, keeping it within the $10.25-$11.25 range from the last two and half weeks

The destruction of Ukraine’s critical export infrastructure suggests that even if the war ends soon, it will take several months, if not years, before things resemble anything “normal.” The market will need to ration demand moving forward. High prices usually cure high prices, but these prices may not be high enough.

On March 31st the USDA will release their 2022 planting intentions estimates. The USDA has never released a combined corn and soybean planting acreage report above 181 million acres, so I expect that to continue this year too. Last month the USDA Economic Outlook Forum projected 92 million corn and 88 million bean acres for a total of 180 million combined acres. I expect this report will show 92-92.25 million corn and 88-88.25 million bean acres for a combined total of 180-180.5 million acres

Market Action

April Straddle

On January 19th when May corn was trading at $6.00, I sold a $6.00 April straddle (where I sell both the $6.00 put and the $6.00 call) and collected over 46 cents. I placed this trade on 10% of my 2021 production. The options on this trade would expire 3/25/22.

What Does This Mean?

  1. If May corn is above $6.46 on 3/25/22 – I would let this option execute, giving me a short futures position of $6.00. With the 46 cents I collected, the final sale would essentially be like selling $6.46.
  2. If May corn is below $5.54 on 3/25/22 – No sale is made but, and I would lose penny for penny whatever the difference between the value of May corn is below $5.54.
  3. If May corn is between $5.54 and $6.46 on 3/25/22 – No sale is made, but I would get to keep some of the 46 cents of profit from selling the straddle that I could add to a later trade. The closer the market is to $6.00 on that day, the more profit I keep because I will either have to buy back the $6.00 call or $6.00 put before options expiration.

What Happened?

On 3/25/22 May corn was trading at $7.35, so I let the call option execute at $6.00 and with the 46 cents of profit I’m left with a sale of $6.46 on 10% of production.

This trade takes me to 80% sold on futures for the 2021 corn crop.

Want to read more by Jon Scheve? Check out recent articles:

Futures Have Turned Sideways. Does Basis Need To Work Higher?

How Likely Is It That Corn Will Trade Below $7 or Above $8?

The Market Is In A State Of Fear And With That Comes Volatile Prices

What Fundamentally Changed To Grains In The Past Week?

Will Corn Test $7 Or Will It Return Back to $6?

Will South American Yields Be As Bad As Predicted?

Setting Bean Basis At The Highest Level Of the Year

Jon Scheve

Superior Feed Ingredients, LLC

jon@superiorfeed.com

AgWeb-Logo crop
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