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Another try for wheat price rally – Market Watch

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: July 18, 2002

Saskatoon newsroom

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The sustained boost to wheat prices that many expected last year might

be developing now.

Last winter, many analysts said the weak global economy and strong U.S.

dollar together weakened demand and mitigated what should have been a

stronger wheat market driven by tight supplies.

What a difference a few months make.

This summer, rather than rebuilding wheat stocks, it seems they will

tighten even more with bad weather hurting yields in Canada, the United

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States, Australia and China, and fiscal havoc in Argentina reducing

seeded acreage.

Last week, the U.S. Department of Agriculture slashed its global wheat

stocks forecast for the end of the 2002-03 crop year by nine million

tonnes to 147.08 million tonnes.

That is down a whopping 13.6 million tonnes from the ending stocks in

2001-02.

Estimates of North American production of wheat, soybeans and corn will

probably be scaled back more in future reports after the damage caused

by recent searing temperatures and rainless skies.

The other side of the equation, the mighty American dollar, is on the

ropes as foreign investors pull money out of the troubled U.S. stock

market.

The euro regained parity with the U.S. dollar on July 15, a point it

hadn’t seen for about two years.

A weak U.S. buck means grain sold in that currency is more affordable

and, theoretically, exports should increase.

In fact, U.S. wheat exports recently have been better than expected.

All this is conspiring to push wheat prices higher.

By July 15, the July Minneapolis spring wheat contract had risen about

50 cents US per bushel, or about 17 percent from its level at the end

of May.

Americans plant peas

The July 11 USDA crop production report showed a big jump in U.S. pea

acreage.

Planted acreage of dry edible peas in the U.S. for 2002 is estimated at

271,500 acres, up 28 percent from 2001 and 44 percent higher than 2000.

That is still small compared to Canada’s 3.2 million acres, but

producers here are watching American developments closely, since they

include several pulse crops in the farm bill.

North Dakota acreage is almost half the total, up 44 percent from last

year. Other states with substantial area are Washington, Idaho and

Montana.

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