Analysts asked to take second look

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Published: October 17, 2002

In an unusual move, Agriculture Canada market analysts were asked to

take a second look at what wheat prices would have been on July 31

after Alberta farmers began expressing concerns that crop insurance

prices were based on out-of-date prices.

“We were asked to take a second look at the prices,” said Glenn Lennox,

wheat analyst for Agriculture Canada’s market analysis division, which

sets final crop insurance numbers for the provinces.

Normally, analysts base Alberta crop insurance’s variable price option

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on the Canadian Wheat Board’s last Pool Return Outlook of the crop

year. But because there was such a dramatic jump in wheat prices from

the July 25 PRO to the Aug. 9 mid-month PRO, Lennox said the Alberta

Financial Services Corp., which operates crop insurance, asked the

analysts to go back and predict what the price would have been on July

31, the cut-off date for the projected market price.

“This was a really weird exercise for us because normally we use

everything we know at that point and time to make a number.”

Instead, crop insurance officials told the analysts not to use their

present knowledge of higher wheat prices and crop shortages, but only

the information they would have had at the end of July.

“The constraint put on us by Alberta crop insurance was that we

couldn’t use anything we didn’t know on July 31,” Lennox said.

“I would have been just as happy to use the Aug. 9 PRO and go with the

higher numbers.”

Using the prices that they thought would be realistic on July 31,

analysts revised wheat prices upward, but not enough to trigger a 10

percent difference of the price set in January.

Lennox said that in a normal year, using the wheat board’s last PRO of

the crop year provides a good enough price prediction for the variable

price option.

“The board’s track record has really been quite good.

“It’s just with the rapidly rising prices and the shrinking crop size

throughout July and August, the PRO lagged the actual increase in

prices. They were being cautious, I guess.”

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