StatsCan stocks numbers confirm rapid pace of exports

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Published: February 4, 2016

WINNIPEG, Feb 4 (CNS Canada) – The state of Canada’s grain and oilseed exports appear to be in fine form, based on the latest stocks figures released Thursday morning by Statistics Canada.

Stocks of wheat, canola and oats are all down compared to last year. In wheat’s case, there were roughly five million fewer tonnes in farmers’ bins at the end of 2015, compared to the year before.

“It certainly confirms the idea Canada has been moving a fair bit of wheat, which is good,” said Ken Ball of PI Financial in Winnipeg, Manitoba.

All wheat total stocks as of Dec. 31, 2015 were pegged at 20.68 million tonnes, down from 25.62 million tonnes in the previous year.

“Steady exports have really helped chew through wheat which has been a relatively good news story for the Canadian farmer,” agreed Jonathon Driedger, a senior market analyst with Farmlink Marketing Solutions near Grunthal, Man.

The numbers suggests strong feed usage was a factor too, according to another analyst.

“It looks like we’ll have a significant drop in carryout stocks (wheat) year over year at the end of the crop year,” said Jerry Klassen, manager of the Canadian office for Swiss-based GAP S.A. Grains and Products.

However, Ball doubts the numbers will impact the market all that much.

“The wheat numbers won’t have a big impact. It just tells us we’re moving more wheat out of Canada than the U.S.,” said Ball.

As for canola, the stocks report came in half a million tonnes lower than in 2014. Canola total stocks as of Dec. 31, are pegged at 12.12 million tonnes, down from 12.60 million tonnes the year previous.

At least one analyst believes there is still more canola sitting in Canadian farmers’ bins than first thought.

“Considering that the rate of usage is at a record pace … and the recent whack of Chinese and Pakistan business we had with no market reaction, this tells me there is more canola out there than is being reported,” said Mike Jubinville of Pro Farmer Canada.

He stressed this didn’t necessarily mean it would be bearish for prices, but it would limit the ability for canola launch a sustained rally.

Ball says the number for canola seems to indicate that the previous Statistics Canada production number of 17.2 million tonnes was pretty close to the actual tally. While some analysts feel the production number was too high, Ball says today’s Stats Can numbers should put that to bed.

“If anything history would dictate that in these kinds of circumstances StatsCan’s (estimate) is usually too low,” he added.

Oat stocks as of Dec. 31,were pegged at 2.550 million tonnes, slightly down from 2.553 million tonnes the year previous.

Jubinville believes the Stats Can number for oats means the market will continue to grind along at lower price levels. He added that the Chicago futures price for oats also seemed to have grown “disconnected” from the prairie cash market.

The report pegged flaxseed at 732,000 tonnes as of December 31 up from 590,000 tonnes at the end of 2014.

“The size of the stocks level that we see right now suggest this is a sloppy, grindy kind of marketplace,” said Jubinville.

 

Canola Wheat (ex durum)
Carry in 2,321.7 6,118.6
Production 17,231.2 22,205.4
Imports 40.7 45.0
Total supply 19,593.6 28,369.0
Exports 3,994.0 7,747.3
Domestic use 3,480.4 4,164.1
   Food 0 1,121.1
   Seed 58.4 96.0
    Industrial 3,356.1 387.0
   Loss in handling 0.3 10.0
   Feed 124.0 2,550.0
Dec 31 stocks 12,119.2 16,457.6

 

 

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