With harvest creeping ever closer, attention remains on the weather in the UK. Generally, crops are looking healthy, benefitting from rainfall in the latter half of June. Concerns had been growing around the heat in the middle of the month and AHDB’s Crop Condition Survey highlighted crops moving backwards to 24th May, relative to the end of April.
UK prices have recently fallen, tracking the decline in global markets. Trade in old crop is now largely over and attention from buyers will be focused on new crop. Demand for new crop, in particular barley, is likely to be lower next season driven by a decline in the size of the UK pig herd.
UK feed wheat values have fallen, November-22 futures closed at £282 per tonne on 23rd June, down almost £36 per tonne from the end of May. November-23 futures have fallen by £20 per tonne to just over £248 per tonne.
Barley prices have also dropped, feed barley for harvest movement is trading at a £32 per tonne discount to wheat. Malting premiums have reportedly firmed slightly although the feed base has fallen. The winter barley harvest in the UK is now imminent.
Oilseed rape prices have responded to weakness in global vegetable and mineral oil prices. Concerns over the global economic picture has been coupled with expectations of large soyabean crops in South and North America. UK ex-farm oilseed rape prices have fallen £775 per tonne at the end of May to £596 per tonne, as at 24th June. Field bean values have generally fallen with other output prices, albeit at a slower rate. As of 24th June, beans were quoted at £306 per tonne (spot, ex-farm).