CME: USDA Releases Latest Grain Estimates
US - USDA released its latest estimates of US grain and meat supplies for 2012 and below is a brief recap of the grain forecasts and our initial read of the data, write Steve Meyer and Len Steiner.US nearby corn futures were up the daily permissible
limit during the day session on Tuesday on speculation that the
US WASDE report could be more bullish than previously expected.
Market reports indicate that much of the rise in futures
yesterday may have been motivated by traders covering short
positions as well as by reports that Russia is looking to put in
place an export control system that sets a limit on the amount of
grains that can be exported in the upcoming year.
Our initial
read of the report is that it is slightly bearish for corn (due to
higher US and world stocks), moderately bullish for soybeans
(on tighter US supplies) and moderately bearish for wheat
(higher US and global supplies).
In our view, the fact that the
report did not contain any explosive bullish news on corn, which
was part of the frenzy yesterday, could negatively affect futures
in the short term.
Increased wheat supplies could also provide
some relief, particularly in world feed markets. The attached
tables offer comparisons to the pre-report estimates based on a
Dow Jones analyst survey.
As expected, USDA revised up its estimates of US corn
stocks for 2010/11 based on results of the quarterly stocks survey. The change added about 208 million bushels to last year’s
ending stocks, thus boosting the overall supply available at the
start of the 2011/12 marketing year.
One item that remains the
focus of market participants are potential yields for the crop
that is currently being harvested. Harvest progress remains
behind last year’s pace but in line with historical averages.
USDA reports that through 9 October, corn farmers had harvested about 33 per cent of the crop, compared to 50 per cent during the same
period a year ago and 32 per cent for the five year average.
Coming
into the report, analysts pegged national average corn yields at
148.8 bu/acre (Bloomberg). The October USDA WASDE estimate was kept unchanged at 148.1 bu./acre.
On the demand
side, the WASDE report made only a few adjustments.
Feed
and ethanol use was left unchanged while exports were reduced
by 50 million bushels. That reduction in demand together with
the increase in starting stocks added about 194 million bushels
to the expected US ending stocks for 2011/12.
One important aspect of the report is the outlook for
global corn and coarse grain supplies. On average analysts
pegged world corn ending stocks at 119.966 million tonnes, 2.58
million tonnes larger than the September USDA estimate.
The
October WASDE report increased ending stocks for 2011/12 to
123.19 million tones, almost six million tones larger than the September estimate. Most of this was due to the boost in US ending stocks but also larger expected stocks in Former Soviet countries and in the Ukraine.
USDA also raised world wheat ending
stocks for 2011/12 to 202.37 million tones, compared to prereport estimates of 194.644 tonnes.