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Current Position:Home » News » Agri & Animal Products » Cereal Crops » Topic

Wheat Extends Decline as U.S. Seen Adding to Ample Global Supply

Zoom in font  Zoom out font Published: 2014-08-12  Origin: esmmagazine  Views: 48
Core Tip: Wheat dropped for a third day as concerns eased that trade in the Black Sea region will be disrupted and on speculation US farmers may harvest a larger crop than forecast by the government.
Wheat droppeWheatd for a third day as concerns eased that trade in the Black Sea region will be disrupted and on speculation US farmers may harvest a larger crop than forecast by the government.

Futures for September delivery fell 1 per cent to $5.4375 a bushel by 5:02 a.m. on the Chicago Board of Trade and prices in Paris dropped 1.2 per cent. Chicago futures fell 2.2 per cent on 8 August the most since 29 July, when they reached a four-year low of $5.185.

Wheat rebounded from the July low as the standoff in the Black Sea intensified and excess rain in Europe threatened to diminish grain quality. Russia and Ukraine will account for almost a fifth of global wheat exports this year, the US government estimates. Prices are still 16 per cent lower in the past year on expectations global supply will increase.

“In the face of one of the best grain harvests in decades and already-falling grain prices, Russia is unlikely to risk harming its farm sector by limiting exports,” Morgan Stanley analysts led by Adam Longson wrote in a report today. “Without geopolitical disruptions, we expect Chicago wheat prices to resume their downward track,” spurred by improving U.S. hard red winter and spring wheat prospects, they said.

World stockpiles will rise to a three-year high of 190.81 million metric tons before the 2015 Northern Hemisphere harvest, according to a Bloomberg News survey before the U.S. Department of Agriculture updates its forecast tomorrow. Farmers in the US may harvest 2.015 billion bushels, up from 1.992 billion bushels forecast by the USDA last month, according to a separate survey of as many as 19 analysts and traders.

Corn for December delivery rose 0.1 per cent to $3.64 a bushel. Prices dropped 2.1 per cent on 8 August, the biggest loss since 18 July. Soybeans for November delivery dropped 0.2 per cent to $10.8225 a bushel.

 
 
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