Fickle weather trumps seeded acreage reports

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Published: July 4, 2002

Commodity markets were temporarily shocked by government reports

released June 28, but quickly return to gazing anxiously at struggling

crops in the field.

“The market is focused on the weather,” said Alberta Agriculture market

analyst Charlie Pearson.

“Right now yield is more important than seeded acreage. That’s where

things could change big.”

On June 28 the United States Department of Agriculture and Statistics

Canada released their seeded acreage reports.

Both roiled the commodity markets.

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“It’s a day of some surprises,” said Pearson.

Soybean futures jumped in Chicago after the USDA report estimated about

one million fewer soybean acres than analysts expected. That should

reduce harvest acreage by about one percent from last year.

But the USDA found more corn acres than expected, which held back what

has been a surging feedgrains market. About four percent more corn

acres were planted this year than last year, though that’s still one

percent below the acreage of 2000.

Analysts had expected that seeding delays in the Midwest would cause

more farmers to shift corn acres to faster-maturing soybeans.

Wheat prices on U.S. exchanges initially dipped with the news that the

USDA found more spring wheat acres and stocks than traders expected.

The bearish USDA numbers were balanced by the bullish impact of weather

problems on the U.S. and Canadian plains. Wheat futures ended the day

little changed.

Statistics Canada’s numbers also rattled traders, who were surprised

there are fewer barley acres and more canola acres than expected.

But the markets didn’t take it too seriously, some analysts say.

“I think their numbers are rubbish,” said analyst Errol Anderson of Pro

Market Communications.

Ken Ball of Benson Quinn GMS said farmers were doing a lot of crop

switching during the spring seeding period, so surveys such as these

are likely to be off-base.

The survey was of 29,100 farmers and was done May 24 to June 4, before

many areas got rain.

“I think those numbers are too old and there has been too much chaos,”

said Ball.

“Right now I don’t think anyone has a handle on what’s out there.”

For the major prairie crops such as wheat, canola and barley, the more

important factor now is weather.

Huge swaths of prairie farmland are in precarious positions because of

the drought.

“Going from 20 bushels per acre of canola to 30 bushels per acre on

average will have a lot bigger impact on the markets than changes in

seeded acreage,” said Pearson.

Statistics Canada found that small acreage crops have seen a lot of

changes this year from last year.

Oats acreage is the highest in 25 years, at 5.5 million acres. That’s

well above the 10-year average of 4.2 million acres and 27 percent

above last year’s acreage.

Chickpea acreage has collapsed from more than 1.1 million acres to

about 500,000 acres.

Lentils have dropped by 17 percent to 1.5 million acres.

Canaryseed acres have jumped by 68 percent to 705,000 acres, which is

well above the 1996 record of 615,000.

Dry bean acres in Manitoba have expanded, taking Canadian production to

record highs.

About the author

Ed White

Ed White

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