Soyoil, not weather main influence on canola market

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: October 3, 2018

, ,

The current wet and snowy weather plaguing Western Canada isn't to blame for the canola market being on the upswing lately, according to one trader. | Paul Yanko photo

Winnipeg – The current wet and snowy weather plaguing Western Canada isn’t to blame for the canola market being on the upswing lately, according to one trader.

“Canola’s been firm but it really hasn’t shown any reaction whatsoever to the weather, it’s going up because bean oil’s going up and it’s lagging the bean oil gains by quite a bit,” said Ken Ball of PI Financial in Winnipeg.

The canola market hasn’t made large gains though due to it still being “very, very expensive” compared to soybeans, according to Ball. The soybean market is currently seeing pressure from the overhanging threat of a very large United States soybean crop this year, which is influencing the canola market.

Read Also

https://www.gettyimages.ca/detail/photo/cloud-computing-artificial-intelligence-data-center-royalty-free-image/2161674939?phrase=AI&adppopuA stock image of a blue cloud with white points connected by fine blue lines all over it.

AI expected to make itself felt in food systems

Artificial intelligence is already transforming the food we eat, how farmers produce it and how it reaches the consumer, experts say

Currency fluctuations are also having an affect on the canola market. The Canadian dollar rose earlier this week due to trade optimism after a renegotiated North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) was reached. However, before that the dollar had been on the decline.

According to Ball it’s a complicated situation for canola, as there isn’t a weather premium in the market currently. But depending on how the rest of the fall turns out, the weather could affect the market in the long run.

“Traders have to be prepared for possible significant shifts that could occur, especially if the weather does improve later in October and then the harvest gets rolling a little more aggressively. We could see a lot of price pressure coming on canola,” he said.

The canola market should remain fairly well under-pinned for now, according to Ball.

About the author

Ashley Robinson

Ashley Robinson writes for MarketsFarm specializing in grain and commodity market reporting.

Markets at a glance

explore

Stories from our other publications