Local Market Update

 

  • Cereal crops are looking good, with growing conditions having been ideal for autumn/winter sown crops. Barley crops are still being sown, mainly due to lack of other options, and is still looking to have larger planting area than previous years.
  • Demand from dairy has continued to increase barley prices, while wheat prices have remained relatively static. With the forecast predicting higher milk solid prices, there is hope dairy farmers will increase grain feeding, leading to a rise in grain demand and price. With barley supply appearing limited, many dairy farmers may switch to the more abundant and (currently) lower-priced wheat once their systems allow.
  • PKE is trading around $345/t ex store for spot purchases.
  • Industry buyers remain conservative around both prompt and spread pricing for 2024 grain.

 

Ruralco is always looking for grain to supply a wide range of end users. If you have free or uncontracted grain that you would like to sell, please contact the Ruralco Seed team. Drop your sample at any Ruralco Store, contact your Ruralco Representative, or call the Ruralco Customer Service Centre on 0800 787 256 to arrange sample bags or pick up. For queries about free or uncontracted grain that you would like to sell please contact the Ruralco Seed Team or request a call back below.

 

Content updated as at 16 October 2024.

 

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Canterbury Growers Pricing Per Tonne*

 

*Nominal pricing, indicative only & subject to change.

 

Import Pricing Per Tonne*

*Pricing at 16 October 2024.

Meet Our Experts

 

John Scott

SEED SALES MANAGER

@: John.Scott@ruralco.co.nz
Ph: 027 227 7048

 

Steve Lawson

Steve Lawson

ARABLE & PASTORAL REPRESENTATIVE

@: steve.lawson@ruralco.co.nz
Ph: 027 245 5661

Australian Update

 

Feedgrain Focus: Prices firm as rain slows Qld harvest

Liz Wells, 10 October 2024. Source: Grain Central

 

Values for most markets quoted have firmed in the past week in response to international and domestic factors.

On the local front, storms have brought rain and hail to parts of Queensland where harvest is gathering pace, and frosts have further impacted yield potential of some crops around the Victoria-South Australia border.

In far northern New South Wales, harvest has started in the past week on a number of farms, while in the state’s far south, frosted crops are being cut for hay after receiving limited in-crop rain.

Consumers are advancing coverage in all states, with a big crop from northern and central NSW the buffer for feedmills in the south.

 

Patchy rain in north

Some wild storms over the past two days have dumped 80mm or more of rain on isolated crops in southern and Central Qld, but plenty of gauges registered not a drop.

Storms have also brought hail and wind to some districts.

With good drying weather following, traders told Grain Central the storms will have little to no impact on most Qld growers, but have been devastating for others.

The Jandowae district north of Dalby is particularly hard hit, with one grower said to have lost 300t of ripe barley to hail.

Goondiwindi-based Knight Commodities broker Gerard Doherty said some of the wider region’s high-yielding crops had lodged prior to the storms.

“There are a few problems out there,” Mr Doherty said.

“There’s quite a lot of lodging, and now they’ve had the storm on top, that’s not great.”

While Downs crops generally missed out on a rain to maximise their yield potential, some northern NSW and border-region crops got lucky.

“Barley’s been coming off for the past two or even three weeks, and there are some outstanding yields of 4-6t/ha.”

Mr Doherty said with many consumer sites full for now, a lot of barley is going from the paddock into on-farm storages or warehousing as its $40-$45/t discount to wheat in the prompt market buys it demand.

“Everyone realises barley is quite cheap.”

The northern wheat market is not as active, even though the Western Downs harvest is in full swing, notwithstanding recent rain for some.

Mr Doherty said some growers have forward sold as much as half of their expected tonnage.

With yield and quality prospects generally good to very good, concerns about not being able to honour those contractual commitments are limited.

However, concerns are building that general rain forecast for NSW and southern Qld next week will impact quality.

“The weather’s got everyone spooked.”

One trader said consumer interest in extending coverage has picked up in recent days.

“They’re taking a phone call, which wasn’t happening last week,” the trader said.

“If you can move it quickly, barley is in demand.”

The trader said while this week’s storms have done a great deal of damage to some crops, the overall impact on the market will be short-lived as roads and paddocks here and there drain.

“It’ll be awkward for 48hrs.”

On the positive side, rain has been ideal for sorghum already in the ground, and for those who are keen to plant this month.

“Rain now is excellent for sorghum; three or four weeks ago it was really struggling,” Mr Doherty said.

 

Caution rules in south

With old-crop stocks just about sold out by the grower, the absence of forward selling has quietened activity in the south as the reality for many of below-average cereal yields hits home.

“Growers are not participating in the marketing of new-crop grain,” Peters Commodities trader Peter Gerhardy said.

“They’re sitting back and seeing what is going to happen with quality and price.”

Mr Gerhardy said growers were also loath to expose themselves to the possibility of having to wash out contracts or buy in forward-sold grain their own farms would not be able to supply in volume, quality, or both.

“Those games are nasty games, those washouts.”

While both SA and Vic will have comfortable export surpluses of wheat and barley from the upcoming harvest, volume will be well down on the norm.

In the southern third of NSW, where frost has had an impact in some districts, crops with a low yield and/or quality potential are being cut for hay, as they are in Vic and SA.

“Growers with all their own haymaking gear…are cutting for hay now.”

That hay is either being sold for cash, fed to stock, or used to replenish on-farm reserves depleted over what for many has been an extremely dry year to date.

Parts of south-eastern Australia have had light rain in the past week, enough to preserve yield potential in cereals in some cases and soften the impact of frost.

Provided rain does not hit at harvest, quality of wheat and barley from the northern half of NSW is expected to be high after its stellar growing season and minimal frost damage.

“If barley from up there is $240-$260/t on farm, plus $80-$90 for freight, it’s not going to work into Melbourne.”

Mr Gerhardy said south-central NSW is looking like a good place from which to source plump feedgrain.

“Some Vic and SA buyers are trying to suss out NSW already.”

In SA, Platinum Ag agronomist Phil Holmes said significant areas of canola followed by wheat have been cut for hay due to their low yield potential after a dry growing season and a frosty spring.

“Canola and wheat are the worst affected,” Mr Holmes said.

“People are well and truly into haycutting.

“In most drought-affected crops in the Mid North, sheep have been put into them, and in some cases, they’re out of them already.

“With hay, yields are lower than average, but what’s there is going to be good quality.”

Mr Holmes said hay yields of 2t/ha for canola and 2-4t/ha for wheat were being seen in the region’s truly awful season.

On the plus said, Mr Holmes said plenty of fully formed seeds can be seen in ripening wheat heads, so what will be harvested should be of sound quality.

“Looking at rainfall for Clare, 1914 was the driest to the end of September with 200mm; we’re at 207mm, so only 7mm ahead of then.”

“There’s just not going to be much hay about.”

Mr Holmes said some larger livestock operations were buying hay in from NSW to supplement what is available locally, and hopes were high for even 10-12mm of rain before the month is out to help crops fill and pasture grow.

Feed Wheat Comparison

 

 

Feed Barley Comparison

 

World Market Update

Source: International Grains Council

 

Highlights

With offsetting changes across the core commodities, the forecast for world total grains (wheat and coarse grains) production is maintained at 2,315m t. Adjustments this month include another downgrade for the EU, but increases for the US, Australia and Argentina. Following a review of processing requirements, which include upgraded figures for grains-based biofuels, the Council's world consumption estimate is revised 4m t higher m/m (month-on-month), to 2,325m. With global supply cushioned by a larger carry-in, forecast carryover stocks (aggregate of respective local marketing years) are steady m/m, at 581m t.

Reflecting larger than anticipated shipments to key destinations in recent weeks, expectations for soyabean trade in 2023/24 are uprated by 2m t, to 175m, up by 1% y/y (year-on-year). There are few changes to the outlook for 2024/25 supply and demand, with end-season inventories maintained at 82m t (+19% y/y). Partly tied to an upward revision for the prior year, global import demand is raised by 1m t m/m.

Owing to a marginally uprated figure for total rice use, world end-season stocks in 2023/24 are placed 1m t lower m/m. Concerning the outlook for 2024/25, there are no significant adjustments to the global supply and demand balance sheet compared to August, with traded volumes projected to edge up to 54m t.

The IGC Grains and Oilseeds Index (GOI) gained by 5%, as a number of markets consolidated after late-summer losses, but with average prices still down by 15% y/y.

A modest increase in world total grains production in 2024/25, to a record 2,315m t, reflects anticipated larger sorghum, wheat, oats and barley outturns. Although output is higher y/y, total grains availabilities will dip slightly on reduced opening stocks. A small rise in consumption is expected, to a new peak of 2,325m t, with the strongest growth in industrial use. At 581m t, world stocks are projected at a 10-season low, with the sharpest y/y declines in wheat and maize. Reduced import needs in Asia and Europe are reflected in a forecast 7% contraction in global trade, to 421m t.

Further to gains in the previous year, global soyabean output is predicted at a record (+7%) in 2024/25 on tentative expectations for heavy crops in the Americas, with consumption also seen at a fresh peak amid broad-based increases in key consuming areas. Trade is projected to edge up to a high of 178m t (+2%), the third consecutive y/y expansion, with China’s arrivals broadly matching the 2023/24 peak. On the exporter side, dispatches by the US and Brazil are anticipated to rise.

Boosted by larger harvests in Asia, global rice production is estimated at an all-time high in 2023/24, up 1% y/y, with total consumption, primarily for food, holding steady for a second successive year. Tied to gains in Asia, world output is set to expand by 1% in 2024/25, with heavy availabilities seen supporting expanded uptake and modest inventory accumulation. Trade in 2025 is tentatively projected to edge up to 54m t (+1%), shaped by potential buying by African importers.

After falling in the prior year, global lentils output is seen expanding by almost one-fifth y/y in 2024/25, chiefly on a rebound in Canadian production. Given the backdrop of heavy availabilities, world use is predicted to rise, while aggregate stocks are seen more than 40% larger y/y, mostly on an uplift in key exporters. Trade is anticipated to edge down to 4.8m t.

 

Market Summary

After dropping to a near-four year low in August, the IGC GOI notched a modest recovery more recently, rising by 5% from the last GMR.

The IGC GOI wheat sub-Index rose by 4%, recently touching a three-month high, underscored by weather worries in some exporters, as well as broader geopolitical concerns.

Despite an absence of fresh supportive news, the IGC GOI maize sub-Index strengthened by 5% m/m, buoyed by light speculative and technical short covering at CME. The upside was also tied to firmer US Gulf export premiums.

Global rice export markets exhibited mixed trends over the past five weeks. Pulled lower by declines in Vietnam, the US and Pakistan, the IGC GOI rice-sub Index dipped by 1%.

The IGC GOI soyabeans sub-Index advanced by 8%, underscored by improved US export demand and suboptimal Brazilian planting weather, albeit with average quotations still 19% lower y/y.

 
 
 

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