April 2, 2008
by Stephen Denys P.Ag.
The release of the
USDA Planting Intentions Report on March 31st contained a
couple of surprises that will create
opportunities for this planting season. Corn was pegged at 86
million acres, down 8% from last year and one million acres
below analyst expectations. The combined acreage decline in Iowa
and Minnesota alone will more than equal Ontario’s production
this year. Soybeans by comparison came in well above analyst
expectations at over 74.8 million acres which is 18% and over 10
million acres above year ago levels. The market is responding
with soybean futures selling well off historic highs and corn
holding steady to protect and grow acres.
In Canada, it is expected that corn acres will decline at least
10 – 15% given increased winter wheat acres in Ontario, higher
soybean prices and the fear of high fertilizer prices – the
decline coming at a time when new ethanol plants will demand
more corn from Eastern Canadian producers than ever before as we
head into 2009. Isn’t it ironic that at a time when Chicago is
starting to call for more corn acres, most Canadian producers
are looking today at depressed basis levels for new crop corn
that reflect a number of factors including current local
inventories, contraction in feed demand, a dollar at near parity
and a risk premium given volatile commodity markets.
The reality is however that Eastern Canada will need corn going
into next year. This is likely to be reflected in much improved
basis levels as the summer passes and harvest approaches –
particularly if there are any weather related issues affecting
supply. Also, even with much higher fertilizer prices, the ratio
of fertilizer price to commodity price is actually more
favourable now towards use than over the last few years when
commodity prices were low.
If you can store corn, the signals are here that this is a good
year to grow corn, particularly in high yield areas. Even at a
conservative price ratio of 2.1 bushels of corn to soybeans (the
old standard being 2.5 bushels of corn to soybeans) and using
basis adjusted prices of $4.80 for corn and $9.25 for soybeans
in Ontario - today’s ratio favours corn production for acres
that have not been forward contracted yet. Of course financing
requirements, field rotation and your on farm yields could
dictate a different perspective, but overall current market
conditions in Eastern Canada now tilt in favour of corn.
Given recent changes in market prices over the last few weeks,
it is a good time to once again review your crop budgets
for fields that are not already committed – look both at crop
values and your input costs. You might be surprised at what you
find.
The following are details of the USDA's Planting Intentions
Report (millions of acres):
Crop |
USDA
report |
Average analyst estimate |
Range
of estimates |
2007
acres |
Corn |
86.0 |
87.4 |
85.5 - 90.0 |
93.6 |
Soybean |
74.8 |
71.5 |
70.0 - 74.2 |
63.6 |
All wheat |
63.8 |
63.6 |
62.3 - 65.4 |
60.4 |
Pride Seeds is part of
AgReliant Genetics which features one of the largest corn
breeding and testing programs in North America. Based in
Chatham, Ontario, Pride Seeds is performing everywhere you go
through a full range of corn, soybean and forage varieties
designed to meet the needs of producers across Canada. |
|