By Phil Franz-Warkentin, Commodity News Service Canada
WINNIPEG, Sept. 3 – ICE Canada canola contracts were weaker Thursday morning, as Statistics Canada ending stocks numbers came in above trade estimates and the government agency also raised its year-ago numbers.
StatsCan pegged the country’s canola stocks, as of July 31, 2015, at 2.3 million tonnes, which was about 500,000 tonnes above the high end of trade estimates. The larger-than-expected carryout supplies were partially explained by upward revisions to the 2014 production and stocks numbers. Canadian canola supplies on July 31, 2014, are now pegged at 3.0 million tonnes, well above the 2.4 million tonnes that had been originally thought.
Read Also
ICE Canola Midday: Combination of things pushing prices down
By Glen Hallick Glacier Farm Media | MarketsFarm – Intercontinental Exchange canola futures continued lower late Tuesday morning, in what…
Harvest pressure added to the softer tone in canola, as producers make deliveries for cash flow needs and end users are only buying on a scale-down basis.
CBOT soyoil was higher in early activity, which provided some underlying support for canola.
Ideas that recent losses were looking overdone also helped limit the declines.
About 11,000 canola contracts had traded as of 8:45 CDT.
Milling wheat, durum, and barley futures were all untraded.
Prices in Canadian dollars per metric ton at 8:45 CDT: