UK growers
should start making decisions for marketing 2013 crops with some urgency
following the latest USDA report predicting significant increases in global
grain supply and ongoing downward pressure on prices, warns David Eudall of
Nidera UK.
The report
issued on Friday 10th May suggests a near 25 perecnt increase in global maize stocks
over last year presenting a real risk to UK producers as global markets could
now rapidly erode profit from new crop prices levels as the summer progresses,
he says.
“The USDA report gives the first complete estimate of
global grain and oilseed supply and demand for 2013/14 and whilst these figures
are by no means set in stone, they do paint a worrying picture for UK
producers.
“With normal weather over coming weeks, there will be
significant supply replenishment in major producing regions and even areas
where stock levels have been run down to critical levels in recent years are
forecast to see improved production.”
The report predicts 2013/14 US maize production will
be 359 million tonnes - up 85 million tonnes on the drought struck 2012 harvest
– with US corn stocks forecast to more than double to 51 million tonnes by the
end of the season.
In total, global maize stocks could increase by 30
million tonnes to 154.5 million tonnes – a near 25 percent increase.
Production of wheat is predicted to increase in the
EU, Russia and the Ukraine and these will easily offset the 5 million tonne
reduction predicted for the US crop. These increases will take global wheat
production to over 700 million tonnes, increasing stocks by 6 million tonnes.
“Demand will remain high, which is good news for
prices, but the view is that the increased supply will now cope with this,”
David Eudall says.
“Weather is still the key factor in the short term and
old-crop grain stocks are still tight globally, so traders will be very
reactive to any unfavourable weather which may change these predictions.”
But the reality is that barring a weather event the
scale of last year’s drought in the US, stocks will be replenished and prices
will fall as a result, David Eudall says.
“We know that many UK producers are under pressure at
the moment and there are many uncertainties about the domestic crop. The
weather in the next six weeks across the entire Northern hemisphere still needs
to be monitored closely to ascertain crop development and yield potential."
“But from a grain marketing perspective, this is now a
very different year from recent ones and growers must start making plans and
not run the risk of sitting back and hoping the market will pick up."
“This is a critical time and markets will now move
fast so complacency over marketing decisions could present a genuine risk to
the prosperity of many farm businesses.”
Maize for popcorn, cultivated in Hungary, producer UNO FRESCO TRADEX. Deutsch: Mais für Popcorns, kultiviert in Ungarn von UNO FRESCO TRADEX. Français : Maïs pour faire du pop corn, produit en Hongrie par UNO FRESCO TRADEX. (Photo credit: Wikipedia) |
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