TODAY—WEEKLY ETHANOL STATS
Overnight trade has SRW Wheat down roughly 1 cent, HRW down 3; HRS Wheat down 1, Corn is down 1 cent; Soybeans up 2; Soymeal up $0.50, and Soyoil up 5 points.
Chinese Ag futures (January) settled down 35 yuan in soybeans, up 14 in Corn, up 19 in Soymeal, down 8 in Soyoil, and down 48 in Palm Oil.
Malaysian palm oil prices were up 9 ringgit at 2,623 (basis November) at midsession supported by firmer soyoil and crude oil prices.
The 6 to 10 day forecast for the Midwest has not changed with both models indicating fairly healthy rains to fall in all of the region; temps will be above average the rest of the week and into the weekend then, fall to below average the first half of the week and remain there for the rest of the week.
The 11 to 16 day forecast for the Midwest has a bit less than average rainfall for the region and below average temps; temps may be flirting near 32 degrees in far northern sections of the Midwest by the end of the period.
Rains will begin to affect the Delta from Hurricane Laura later today and into tomorrow with the heaviest rains looking to fall west of the main growing regions but, growing areas of eastern LA, eastern AR, and western MS may see some moderate to good rainfall amounts; the 6 to 10 day returns with light to moderate rainfall for most of the region.
The player sheet had funds net buyers of 6,000 contracts of SRW Wheat; net bought 30,000 Corn; bought 15,000 Soybeans; net bought 3,000 lots of Soymeal, and; bought 3,000 Soyoil.
We estimate Managed Money net long 2,000 contracts of SRW Wheat; short 65,000 Corn; net long 115,000 Soybeans; net long 7,000 lots of Soymeal, and; long 61,000 Soyoil.
Preliminary Open Interest saw SRW Wheat futures down roughly 2,800 contracts; HRW Wheat down 3,500; Corn down 42,800 Soybeans up 1,500 contracts; Soymeal up 560 lots, and; Soyoil up 2,900.
There were no changes in registrations—Registrations total 95 contracts for SRW Wheat; ZERO Oats; Corn ZERO; Soybeans 23; Soyoil 2,632 lots; Soymeal 511; Rice ZERO; HRW Wheat 47, and; HRS 1,387.
Tender Activity—Egypt bought 530,000t Russian wheat—Algeria seeks 30,000t optional-origin soymeal–
The U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) on Tuesday said Chinese importers bought more U.S. soybeans and booked their largest single-day U.S. corn purchase in nearly a month as Washington and Beijing reaffirmed their commitment to their Phase 1 trade deal.
Wire story reports the U.S. corn harvest is about a month away from ramping up, but there is more uncertainty over production outcomes than there has been all season after prolonged dry weather and a severe windstorm damaged crops in the heart of the Corn Belt; on Monday, the Department of Agriculture slashed U.S. corn conditions to 64% good-to-excellent, more than analysts expected and a 5-point fall on the week; top producer Iowa fell 9 points to 50%, well below the five-year average of 73% for the week.
Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden threw his support behind U.S. laws that require oil refiners to blend biofuels into the nation’s fuel pool and criticized the Trump administration for its handling of the mandates; a Biden-Harris Administration will promote and advance renewable energy, ethanol, and other biofuels to help rural America and our nation’s farmers, and will honor the critical role the renewable fuel industry plays in supporting the rural economy and the leadership role American agriculture will play in our fight against climate change,” Biden said.
Manitoba crop report: Harvest across much of Manitoba has been periodically interrupted by rain showers, resuming two to three days later; high humidity has limited harvesting hours in some parts, with grain dryers operating in the Interlake region; late-season dryness together with high heat has prompted premature ripening in some soybean and corn fields where soil moisture was inadequate; reported wheat yields to date have been average to slightly below average, given stresses faced by all crops this spring; oats and barley yields are average to above average; overall harvest is 13% complete.
China’s soybean imports from top supplier Brazil surged in July from a year ago, customs data showed on Tuesday, as cargoes bought on the cheap in recent months arrived in the country; they brought in 8.18 million tons of the oilseed from Brazil in July; that was up 27% from 6.42 million tons in July 2019, but lower than the record 10.51 million tons of soybeans imported from the South American country in June.
For the month of July, Chinese importers brought in 10.09 million tons of soybeans overall, driven by good demand from the livestock sector as farmers expanded output to plug domestic pork shortage.
China brought in only 38,331 tons of soybeans from the United States in July, a fraction of the 911,888 tons in the previous year; the figures were also down from 267,553 tons in June.
China’s national weekly soybean inventories reached 7.83 million tons by Aug. 23, their highest since October 2018.
National soymeal stocks also rose to over 1.2 million tons earlier this month, the highest since August 2018, and up from a record low of 139,000 tons in April.
China’s food supplies remain stable and consumers should not be “overly anxious” or even resort to “panic buying”, a senior agriculture ministry official said, following recent uncertainty caused by the coronavirus pandemic; still, farmers and traders should prevent food waste caused by improper storage, while farmers who stockpile in the hope of later gains should be wary that prices could turn against them
Brazilian food producer Central Cooperativa Aurora has voluntarily suspended poultry exports to China from one of its plants starting Aug. 20, the Chinese customs authority’s website showed; the company, which is Brazil’s third largest pork and poultry processor, confirmed the decision to halt sales, but did not elaborate; the plant in the town of Xaxim, in Santa Catarina state, is identified by its SIF registration number 601, the same plant had been blocked by Hong Kong earlier this month over coronavirus concerns.
Brazilian farmers will produce record harvests of soybeans and corn in the upcoming 2020-2021 growing season as good prices for both crops spur growers to increase the area planted, according to crop agency Conab
The Brazilian government on Tuesday revised data on the country’s seven previous soybean crops, altering the estimated production in the world’s largest supplier and exporter of the agricultural commodity; the revision, detailed in a statement from food supply and statistics agency Conab, showed an increase of 14.4 million tons in Brazilian soybean output over the seven years, most of it in the previous three seasons.
Russia has harvested 90.7 million tons of grain before drying and cleaning from 57.5% of the area with an average yield of 3.29 tons per hectare, data from the agriculture ministry showed.
The European Union lowered its duty on maize (corn) imports to 0.26 euros ($0.31) per ton, from 5.48 euros/ton previously, the bloc announced, after U.S. corn price rise.
Consultancy Agritel kept its forecast for France’s 2020 soft wheat crop at 29.2 million tons, down from 39.5 million tons harvested last year, after poor weather hurt both area and yields.
European wheat prices rose on Tuesday, supported by strong international demand and rising U.S. markets on hopes a U.S.-China trade deal could boost demand for U.S. grains; benchmark Euronext December milling wheat was up 0.8% or 1.5 euros at 184.00 euros ($217.32) a ton.
Malaysia’s palm oil exports during the Aug. 1-25 period are estimated to have fallen 16.4% on month to 1,158,013 metric tons, cargo surveyor SGS (Malaysia) Bhd. said.
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