CME: Trade Continues to Debate Drought Situation
US - There is plenty of anticipation ahead of the latest USDA WASDE report as trade continues to debate the potential impact of drought conditions on the current corn crop, write Steve Meyer and Len Steiner in Tuesday 10 July Livestock report.The USDA crop progress update last night showed further deterioration in crop conditions although it did not match some of the more dismal analyst
estimates. As of July 8, USDA indicated that just 40% of the corn
crop was in good/excellent (G/E) condition. This compares to G/E
ratings of about 69% for last year and the five year average. Particularly troubling was the sharp drop in crop conditions in Iowa, with
the latest reading indicating 46% of the crop there in G/E condition.
Last week, USDA had Iowa G/E rating at 62%. Comparisons are
being made to the disastrous impact of the 1988 drought. We have
added the crop ratings from that year for your reference. While we
are still well above the conditions in that drought year, keep in
mind that there are critical differences between this year’s crop and
that in 1988. By the end of the first week in July, USDA reported
that about 50% of the 2012 corn crop was in the silking stage (first
kernel growth stage). During the same week in 1988, just 19% of
the crop was silking. It is critical that the crop receives some moisture in the next 10-14 days. Already there are numerous reports,
especially from the Eastern Corn Belt, of crop failures and farmers
deciding to run a bush hog through dead plants and maybe try for a
late planted bean crop (hard to do given current dry conditions and
lack of subsoil moisture).
It will be interesting to see how USDA will adjust its supply/demand table for corn with this background of dismal drought
conditions and memories of 1988. The planted acres will reflect the
results of the acreage survey at 96.405 million acres. The harvested acres from that survey were estimated at 88.851 but that did not
capture what has happened in the last four weeks and it is possible
the harvested number may be lowered. In 1988, the ratio of harvested to planted was 86% vs. the 92% in the June 2012 Acreage
survey. A one point drop in the ratio implies a loss of about 1 million acres. The July USDA estimate does not rely on objective yield
data because there is nothing to be objectively tested. The estimates reflect trends but also the assessment of USDA analysts
based on field reports and crop progress data. Analysts polled
ahead of the report (to be released at 8.30 am EST tomorrow morning) indicated that they expect the USDA to show ending stocks for
2012/13 at around 1.2 billion bushels. This is about 600 million
bushels less than what USDA published in June but it may not
reflect private estimates of even larger yield losses. Ending stocks
of 1.2 billion bushels are probably based on yields of around 158 bu/ acre (with only small demand changes). This is because trade
thinks USDA will likely be reluctant to make bigger revisions
until August yield data starts to come in. But memories of 1988
persist, a year when actual yields declined 25% from trend. Even
a 12% decline from trend would push yields below 140 bu. acre
and require dramatic feed use rationing.