CME: US Corn Shipments Show Progress in 2012
US - USDA will update this morning its estimates of US grain supplies and use for the 2012-13 marketing year, write Steve Meyer and Len Steiner.For a summary
of analyst estimates ahead of the report see the DLR published
on 12/7. While USDA will not provide a final estimate of the
US corn crop until the January report (after having reviewed the
grain stocks numbers), by now we pretty much know how much corn
was harvested this fall. Any changes will likely be small and unlikely
to alter the overall supply picture. Now the job of the market
is to figure out whether current price levels are sufficient to ration
out available supplies and force demand cutbacks if necessary. Of
the three main demand component, feed, ethanol and exports, we
have good monthly visibility of only the latter two. Feed demand is
pretty much an unknown/unknowable factor and it is derived as a
residual.
Basically we know how much was fed to livestock and
poultry after taking an inventory of grain stocks and deducting how
much corn went to industrial use or was shipped outside of the country.
So far, the data on exports and ethanol appears to indicate that
the surge in corn prices has had the intended effect. Corn exports
are down sharply and ethanol production has slowed down considerably
compared to a year ago. The following chart shows the progress
in US corn shipments this year compared to both year ago
levels and the trend projected by USDA in its November update.
Weekly corn exports slowed down considerably in October and November.
In the last 8 reported weeks, weekly corn exports have
averaged about 13.5 million bushels per week, compared to 32.1
million bushels per week averaged during the same period a year
ago, a 58 per cent decline.
The current trend in US corn export shipments implies that for 2012-13 total corn exports could dip below the 1 billion bushel mark. Some analysts already expect USDA to revise the export number in the December report, implying more corn going into feed. Increased availability of feed from other parts of the world clearly has had an impact. Even shipments within North America are down sharply. While Canada is a relatively small market for US corn, Mexico is the number 2 destination, accounting for about 26 per cent of US corn shipments in 2011-12. US corn shipments to Mexico in the last marketing year amounted to almost 400 million bushels. But, significant liquidation of the beef cow herd and reductions in cattle feeding have limited Mexican demand for US corn. Also, sharply higher meat protein prices in Mexico have further rationed out demand for pork and chicken, forcing cutbacks in overall feed demand. So far this marketing year, US corn exports to Mexico are down around 38 million bushels or 46 per cent from last year.
Ethanol exports, which has been another way to ship
corn to other markets, also have slowed down significantly. In
2011-12, the US shipped the equivalent of 400 million bushels of
corn in the form of ethanol exports. This marketing year, ethanol
exports (in corn bu. equivalent) could be down between 100-
150 million bushels.
Corrections & Amplifications: In yesterdays edition we incorrectly
noted that the economy added 118k jobs in November.
The correct figure is 146k jobs.