In early May, wheat hit contract highs, for example £192 per tonne for November 2021 London futures. Since then, markets have fallen by £20, leaving the same delivery position worth £172. Values throughout the world have fallen in a similar manner. Global sentiment is mostly driving this. Weather conditions have improved for crop growth as lots of rain has arrived – not just in the UK but around the world. Record yields of wheat are now projected for the forthcoming US harvest. Coceral, the European Association of Grain traders, has increased its European harvest projection from 126 to 131 million tonnes of wheat; a substantial uplift in a single month.
This time of year is traditionally volatile for grain prices. This is partly on technical issues to do with tying up the paper transactions associated with the old crop. It is also as rain or no rain push markets around. The market swings are often greater than the benefit or damage the rain has on growing crops. It is not only the effect on crops that are already in the ground. The rain that has fallen in the US Midwest, the grain basket of the West, allows ideal conditions for maize and soybeans planting too.
Old crop wheat Futures expired in May, at the time £25 per tonne higher than new crop. Therefore, it must be assumed that all barns have been emptied with that size of price drop. This should allow ample time to clean them and ensure they are in top condition for the 2021 crop.
Feed barley has slipped in line with the decline of wheat price this month. Malting barley premiums are mixed. This is partly as the UK anticipates a smaller and far more manageable barley crop in 2021 than the mammoth crop last year. It is also in reflection of the current ideal barley ripening weather conditions in Central Europe. The high proportions of barley used in feed rations in 2020/21 are being reduced in preparation for the smaller 2021 crop. Demand is thus likely to be lower this coming marketing year. Growing and ripening conditions are good for barley throughout Europe. Some harvesting might even have started by the next edition of this bulletin.
In the 2020-2021 marketing year, China moved from importing no more than 5 or 6 million tonnes of maize each year to importing 25 million tonnes. The USDA has projected a similar level for 2021-22 (harvest 2021), but some analysts believe they have already booked approaching that amount. This suggests their maize importing might continue rising in the coming years, in a similar manner they did for soybeans over the last couple of decades to world-changing levels. This could tighten supply in 2021/22, potentially pushing the whole grain price matrix higher.
Oilseed rape price has also declined, albeit by proportionately less than the cereals market. It is easy to note that OSR has fallen £20 this month. But also remember it is £60 per tonne higher than three months ago, even after the recent fall.