China is behind the rising demand for US grain sorghum that has placed a premium on the crop, benefiting farmers and seed developers alike, AgProfessional reports.
The push for sorghum has created
an industry shift that has caused farmers to reconsider their crop rotations
and economists to upwardly revise their guidance. The US Department of
Agriculture Economic Research Service (ERS) in January raised its 2014/2015
US sorghum export forecast by 17 percent to 270 million bushels, a level not
visited since the 2007/2008 marketing year.
Read the article HERE.
While industry
participants ride the current tide, institutional investors are similarly
showing up, evidenced by sorghum planting seed developer Chromatin's recent
US$12 million equity raise.
Kansas farmer
Clayton Short's 2200 acre farm is comprised of wheat, soybeans and grain
sorghum. The stage is set for the 2015 new crop.
"We reduced
wheat acres by about 15 percent, and we reduced soybeans by about 15 percent.
That's all going to grain sorghum," Short told Global AgInvesting, adding
the entire sorghum harvest will ultimately be sent to China.
"We can
change the crop rotation to what we feel can make us the most profit per
acre."
The USDA ERS
sorghum price projection for the 2014/2015 season, which ends in August, is US$3.80
per bushel, up US$0.30 from previous estimates. This compares to estimates of US$3.65
per bushel for corn.
According to
Short, Central Kansas is currently getting US$0.90 a bushel more for sorghum
over corn, which is largely unprecedented.
"Generally
[sorghum is] even or below corn's price. It's a good deal for sorghum
growers," he said.
Kansas farmer
Short is making that gamble. His shift to higher sorghum acreage is for the new
crop bid that has yet to be harvested. China has only booked sorghum bushels as
far out as May. Nonetheless he is confident the demand is sustainable.
"We want to
believe - and there is some evidence - they will continue this buying
throughout the summer," he said.
Short's farm
currently yields about 80 bushels of sorghum per acre, a harvest he says could
be better once seed technology catches up with that of other crops.
"Sorghum
research has lagged well behind corn, soybeans and wheat. That's a real issue
for sorghum growers," he said.
According to
Daphne Preuss, President and CEO of Chromatin, that's all about to change.
"We now have
leading products that are undergoing scale-up," Preuss told Global
AgInvesting, pointing to results from Chromatin hybrids in China where yields
have increased by as much as 30 percent.
Chromatin, which
sells sorghum planting seed that creates crops for a variety of end-use
markets, came on the scene in 2009 when it began investing in sorghum R&D.
The company is entirely focused on sorghum.
"We looked
at 40 crop options, and this one rose to the top," said Preuss.
The formula has
been a success for Chromatin, evidenced by the tenfold revenue growth the seed
company has experienced since 2010. Today the business has revenue in the tens
of millions of dollars and is transitioning to profitability. Chromatin has
raised US$72 million in equity since its formation including the US$12 million
follow-on investment from Wood Creek Capital Management in December, which will
go toward company expansion.
While Preuss thinks
about Chromatin's exit strategy, including a possible IPO or acquisition, the
company remains focused on growth.
"We don't
have a for sale sign on the front lawn," she quipped.
China's No. 1 end
use for sorghum is the livestock industry for everything from swine to their
duck population. However, there is also a pocket of demand for other end uses.
"Their drink
of choice is baijiu, a grain alcohol made from grain sorghum. We've seen
significant interest in Kansas for sorghum through [shipping] containers,"
said Sarah Bowser, Sorghum Checkoff Regional Director for Holton, KS.
Chromatin
currently sells its hybrid seeds in 40 countries including China, where its
growers buy forage sorghum as feed for the emerging dairy industry.
China has been
favoring sorghum over corn amid constraints on the latter crop, including a GMO
corn trait rejected by the country. Sorghum, meanwhile, has no GMO link. While
the GMO corn trait is now allowed, US producers are in no rush to ship the
controversial crop for fear it will be returned anyway.
"There is
still robust [sorghum] demand from China including for new crops," said
Bowser.
Sorghum Checkoff,
which was formed to support investments into R&D for the US sorghum market,
has in recent years been sending industry experts and trade teams including
farmers to educate the Chinese about sorghum usage. China's need is so great
that the entire U.S. sorghum crop couldn't meet the Asian nation's duck-feed
grain demand.
"This speaks
to the significance of Chinese feedstock demand and is a major reason we're
seeing market attention and significant base levels and premiums at the farm
gate in the US," said Bowser, adding Chinese demand continues to be
present going forward.
"There is a
high degree of confidence that this demand will continue into the near-term
future, for sure into next fall. The substantial demand should trigger
increased acres and change planting decisions."
According to
Preuss, there are several favorable macroeconomic drivers for sorghum,
something the company recognized before the stars aligned for Chinese demand.
"Globally
there is an increased population and greater demand for protein-rich
food," she said.
Meanwhile, there
has been a deterioration in farmland quality, which lends itself to a crop like
sorghum that requires half the water that corn does to grow and needs fewer
inputs.
Besides,
according to Kansas farmer Martin Kerschen, who has had a crop rotation with
sorghum (33 percent), soybean (33 percent) and wheat (33 percent) for the past
five years,
"Sorghum is
a great crop and fun to grow." Kerschen has had success with his current
crop rotation and isn't changing a thing. He hopes, however, that neighboring
farmers will similarly recognize the benefits and profits tied to sorghum and US
acres will ramp up.
Read the article HERE.
The Global Miller
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