Western Canadian Crop Marketing Update – August 23rd

Western Canadian Crop Market Update

Click Here To Access 2024/25 Crop Recommendations

Canola

  • Updated Feed Barley and Yellow Pea recommendations in tab above. Click green link above to access.
  • Strong close on Friday’s trade for Canola, up nearly $20 per tonne.
  • Western Canadian rail strike being forced into binding arbitration on Thursday afternoon was part of todays price action.
  • Strength in Soyoil and EU rapeseed helped keep the spike intact and closed with strength into Friday.
  • Port basis Vancouver track sits at $28 above. Generally holds a $40 positive. Weak futures and lower basis has Canada as some of the Cheapest canola globally. Check out charts below.
  • We have been seeing some consistent overnight sales of US Soybeans into China for new crop production in the next week. Markets not convinced yet that this is nearly enough, but the lower prices are attracting some bids.
  • Canada does not have any system for reporting sales, only reports exports.
  • Early August exports strong so for the first two weeks of the marketing year. We have moved out over 600,000 tonnes of grain in the first few weeks of the marketing year. Very impressive numbers. Likely will see a sharp decrease due to the logistical issues of rail strike until orders back to normal.
  • New crop canola will be available to the market starting September 1st
  • Overall market sentiment understands that we have a large Corn and Soybean crop coming in the United States.
  • United States soybeans FOB sitting at some of the cheapest values in the globe. North American grains in general very cheap and we will need some impressive usage numbers to incent traders to take their fingers off the sell button.
  • Western Canadian front bids at lowest levels since mid February. N
  • November canola made contract lows consistently for the past two weeks and touched as low as $561 per tonne, sitting at $585 as of Friday close. Overall sentiment towards ag commodities has been negative with Corn and Soybeans both hitting contract lows in recent sessions as well.
  • For the short term, rallies need to be sold into if producer is undersold. These rallies will be more challenged as we get into harvest. Know your position and where you want to be sold. Opportunities will need to be capitalized upon in short order. Work with your advisor to “stickhandle” cashflow, logistical and other requirements.
  • PRODUCTION:
    • Western Canadian Crop forecasted to be larger than last year. USDA forecasting a 20mmt crop for Canada. We will see updated FAS USDA figures on Monday. Most private analysts have the crop at 19.5mmt or smaller at the start of August but are quickly pushing the number closer to a 19mmt figure.
    • The top end yield has been trimmed. Many producers reported a great start to the crop but things dried out in the past 4-6 weeks and heat came intensely during this same timeframe.
    • Very early canola yields not good at all. But August canola yields tend to be lean that way.
    • September 1st we will begin to see a good representative sample of Canola yields if weather cooperates.
  • EXPORTS and USAGE:
    • European Union forecasting a smaller crop than last year and harvest is getting close to wrapped up. Crop estimates from government agencies state around 19mmt crop. Private sources call the European crop closer to 18mmt. EU needs around 25mmt total and larger imports will be required. Canada exported next to nothing this past marketing year to EU. Through the first 11 months of the crop marketing year, we exported 103,000 tonnes to Belgium. Few years ago, it was not uncommon to do 500,000 to 1.5 mmt in years where EU faced crop shortfall.
    • OLD CROP: For the 2023/24 canola export program, Canadian canola was much to expensive to compete with Australian Canola for the first half of the export program. By early January, Canadian canola exports were only tracking for 6mmt of total exports, a dismal export number. It was not until exports picked up last half of the year where we came in right around 7mmt.
    • AAFC has 2024/25 export forecast at 7.0 mmt. This is viewed as a conservative figure, many private analysts sit around 8.0 mmt assuming Japan, Mexico and European Union will likely be in for more crop, time will tell.
    • See Global FOB canola prices chart above and historic ones below.
    • AAFC Charts below from July 22, 2024 report.
  • GOING FORWARDS:
    • Harvest will be taking full force here shortly, It is key that traders get a good start to the canola export program. Hoping the rail issue is resolved. Global Rapeseed and Canola balance sheet has potential to tighten up longer term, ending stocks already shaping up 9% smaller than last year according to USDA figures. Will mostly depend on what Canadian canola crop comes in at. We know other global production regions well enough already as harvest underway. Early yield reports will be closely watched. Some frosts reported first week of August 2024 in Saskatchewan. Damage is unknown at this point.
    • Australian crop the wildcard here, although their crop is expected to be 200,000 tonnes smaller than last year. This crop is in the ground and will be harvested Oct/Nov/Dec.

Spring Wheat

  • Spring Wheat values found new contract lows this week. Good quality and abundant yield being reported in northern United States. Cereal values weighted down in general.
  • Spring Wheat futures still sit about $2.20 USD per bushel from their late May peak
  • Wheat, Corn and Soybeans all sitting near levels last seen in 2020 and making new contract lows.
  • Markets have been in a downwards trend since the end of May. No weather stories and prospects of a potential record yield from North Dakota, the largest Spring Wheat producing state in the USA
  • For the short term, rallies need to be sold into if producer is undersold. These rallies will be more challenged as we get closer to harvest. Know your position and where you want to be sold. Really work closely with your advisor on your general marketing plan, decide what crops need to move and what crops we are keeping at home. Weight the risk and reward of each decision.
  • PRODUCTION:
    • Canadian non durum wheat crop expected to be large. 1.2 mmt larger than last years crop. Around 29MMT is expected to be produced according to AAFC’s latest stab at the crop size. Looks like ending stocks could be more burdensome than earlier forecasted as well.
    • Wheat will come down to quality. Protein levels and quality will be closely watched. Plenty of producers concerned about potential fusarium infection due to rains around heading and anthesis.
    • Early harvest wheat quality in Western Canada is not good at all. Lightweight is the main issue. Protien looks alright so far, Some disease is prevalent.
    • Global production – Winter wheat crop is off in the United States. Quality was quite good and plenty of good yields reported. US Spring wheat harvest will commence shortly but majority of fields will be ready to go mid August. Market expects a good crop, private tours are touting it to be a record yield in North Dakota.
    • Across the pond, wheat quality is questionable at best. Some multi decade low wheat yields being reported in Germany and France Plenty of low protein wheat coming off fields in Russia, Ukraine, Germany, France, Poland. Grading issues a concern over rains at harvest especially in France and Germany.
    • French wheat is forecasted by private analysts at around 25 mmt. Last year the crop was closer to 35mmt
  • EXPORTS and USAGE:
    • Global balance sheet for wheat actually tightest in several years. Ending stocks of 257 million tonnes vs 260 to 285 mmt range in recent years. Balance sheet amongst key exporters even tighter.
    • Ukraine entered Russia’s Kursk region early August, first true offensive onto Russian soil since the war began.
    • Canadian exports last year were particularly strong, not due to cheapness, but due to the quality of the crop. We need some good new crop quality coming into the system to give us the blending capacity we need. Canadian crop was blended and fit a gap in the market. Exporters looking to hit the same niche this year and push wheat exports as strong as they were last year.
    • AAFC has 2024/25 export forecast at 20.5 mmt. This is viewed as a strong year and will keep ending stocks in check.
    • AAFC Charts below from July 22, 2024 report.
  • GOING FORWARDS:
    • Harvest will be taking full force here shortly, wheat prices are at some of the lowest levels in 4 years. Harvest pressures may last longer than anticipated especially if there is any rail strike or logistical issues. We are 30% sold new crop overall and will await quality results before making next cash sale move.

Oats

  • Oat prices are sit at $3.75 to $4.50 new crop across the prairies. The $4.50’s belong to the glyphosate free market. Oat market prices have followed other ag commodities lower. Oats were anticipated to have been heavily sold by producers early in the production year when values were about $0.50 to $1.00 per bushel higher than todays values.
  • Oat crops loosing top end yield with the heat and dryness. Producers beginning to mention worried about test weight with lack of any precipitation towards the end of the filling period. Oat balance sheet could tighten up if yield losses come to fruition. North East sask and Western Manitoba will call the shots on this crops balance sheet.
  • Lowered yield sentiment in recent weeks should keep oat inventories in check. Front end demand is largely covered off for oats although and pricing will depend on post harvest demand and how this crop actually shakes out. AAFC is calling for a carryout of just 350,000 tonnes which would be considered very tight. Private analysts are about double that figure as private industry anticipates more oat acres were planted than government agencies reported this spring.

Barley

  • End users / Maltsters came out of the gate early with bids and appear to have covered off front demand. Malt supply never is truly understood until harvest. Barley acreage down slightly year over year, but export demand has shifted lower than in a few prior years.
  • Some grade issues in Alberta and Southern Sask harvested barley. The crop is having trouble with bushel weight and high protein being reported. More barley will be off into next week. Maltsters will need to be nimble here to source the proper supply they need.
  • Corn is the Achilles heel to feed barley pricing. Corn is very cheap and even with barley values about 40% lower year over year, it still struggles to find competitiveness into feed rations. Barley is pricing into Alta feedlots competitively right now, but walks a fine line with corn.
  • Exports are not expected to be anything special as we largely lost a pile of market share to the Australian market exporting into China.
  • Malt is the play this year and grade at harvest will dictate price sentiment. Early malt bids are still holding place.

Pulses

  • Early lentil yields are coming in across western Canada. Early results are mixed. Most sentiment is lower than anticipated with the early results for yields. Some small pockets reporting above average yields but more common to see less than anticipated yields. Some grade issues.
  • AAFC July 22nd Report Chart Below
  • Lentil stocks could get heavy this year and private analysts and gov agencies calling for a sizeable growth in carryout. Global demand will be the key factor here. A few key sales to export markets will dictate the balance sheet massively come the end of the marketing year. Watch yield and grade next two weeks.

Durum

  • Durum beginning to be harvested in western Canada. Yields leaning to the disappointing side from prior estimates and light weights are commonplace. There are plenty of grade issues. Disease will be closely watched this year as some rains fell at prime time for disease timing. Better picture next week but looks like the crop is coming in smaller than July estimates.

Flax

  • Flax production is forecasted to be quite small this year with less acreage going into the ground. In fact, Flax acres are the smallest since the mid 1940’s. Flax prices will be influenced by EU demand. Russia’s flax crop will be challenged to move into EU borders this year due to new import tariffs that began on July 1st for flax which will be scaled up in the coming years.

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