World wheat prices continue to disappoint

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Published: February 28, 2002

The 2001-02 crop brought farmers disappointing returns, and the 2002-03

crop probably won’t make up for it, say many market analysts.

“So far we’ve seen very little price response from tighter

fundamentals. Will that trend continue in 2002-2003?” asked Canadian

Wheat Board market analyst Dwayne Lee during the Grain World conference.

Lee then charted a number of reasons the CWB feels higher prices are

unlikely, and released the board’s first pool return outlook for the

2002-03 crop year.

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The CWB’s analysis of the world wheat situation was similar to one

released by the United States Department of Agriculture on Feb. 22.

“The stage was set in 2001-02 for strong U.S. wheat exports and higher

U.S. and world prices,” said USDA chief economist Keith Collins.

“Yet this season’s U.S. wheat exports are expected to be the smallest

in five years with prices below $3 US per bushel again. Wheat missed an

opportunity …. Looking ahead at 2002-03, another opportunity like the

past year for wheat is unlikely.

“The world wheat market is likely to be brutally competitive in

2002-03.”

The Canadian Wheat Board is estimating fairly steady wheat prices but

weaker values for durum.

In 2001-02, wheat prices were held in check by small wheat exporters

who were able to fill the market shortages that major exporters were

beginning to ration, said Germain Denis, executive director of the

International Grains Council, during the Grain World conference.

“You even have India and Pakistan (exporting wheat now),” said Denis.

“You have Russia, Kazakhstan and Ukraine. The (small exporters) have

about 20 percent of the world market They have become a significant

force in the world grain market.”

Lars Hoelgaard of the European Commission said buyers these days aren’t

as likely to be spurred into a buying panic by historically low

stocks-to-use ratios. That is another factor that stopped prices from

taking off last year.

“In the past (the present stocks-to-use ratio) would have resulted in

increases in prices, but what we’re seeing now, what the trade is

telling us, is that because of the move away from state trading

enterprises on the importing side … that this practice of buying up

and holding stocks as we saw in the past isn’t the behaviour now.”

Lee said the 2001-02 market was a product of tighter global wheat

stocks especially in a number of major exporters, stronger import

demand in some areas, a quality North American crop with high protein,

but slow U.S. exports as larger southern hemisphere crops and small

exporters filled the new demand.

The coming crop year will probably be affected by the continuing

shrinkage of U.S. and global wheat stocks, below-average Canadian

production, large export supplies among the smaller exporters and

slightly weaker global demand.

Crucial factors to watch are the size of European Union and eastern

European crops, the amount China buys, and the effects of the U.S. farm

bill, Lee said.

The CWB is forecasting slightly higher world wheat production, at 583

million tonnes compared to 2001-02’s 577 million tonnes. That’s well

below 1997-98’s 609 million tonnes, but substantially above levels in

the early 1990s.

World wheat consumption is expected to outstrip production for the

fourth year in a row. That means world wheat stocks will decline as

they have every year since 1998-99. The 141 million tonnes of wheat in

stocks represents the lowest stocks-to-use ration since 1974-75 at 23.8

percent.

But the board also forecasts world wheat trade to fall in 2002-03.

Europe became the world’s leading importer in 2001-02, because of poor

domestic crops. If Europe experiences better weather, that demand will

disappear.

China may import more wheat now that it is part of the World Trade

Organization, which may make up some of the lost demand.

Wheat stocks among the major exporters are expected to remain about the

same.

Denis said the world wheat market now looks at more than just the

stocks of the few traditional exporters.

“The small stocks (among the big exporters) establish a floor, and the

considerable availability from the smaller exporters put a ceiling on

that,” said Denis.

About the author

Ed White

Ed White

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