The Denver Post

Wheat sits at its lowest in decade; storage tight

- By Jeff Wilson

To understand one of the main reasons why wheat producers are having such a tough time, talk to Oklahoma cattle feeder Hitch Enterprise­s Inc.

The company has the capacity to feed 90,000 cattle and raise 300,000 hogs annually, and would normally be in the market to buy wheat. But it hasn’t bought any of the grain in four years.

“We were looking at wheat substituti­on in June and then corn prices fell and we bought up more corn,” said Tommy Tomlinson, the company’s 71year-old vice president of procuremen­t.

Simply put, the world has too much wheat. U.S. sellers of the low-quality and soft red variety are struggling to displace foreign wheat supplies in global markets, and they aren’t making much headway selling it as animal feed either, with an imminent U.S. corn harvest that’s expected to be the biggest ever. Some storage is already filled and merchandis­ers are building temporary ground piles.

The extent of the problem is likely to be reinforced Friday when the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e publishes its latest quarterly crop-stockpile estimates.

Traders surveyed by Bloomberg expect the USDA to say wheat inventorie­s on Sept. 1 — three months into the wheat marketing year — were 2.442 billion bushels. That’s 16 percent higher than a year earlier and the most since 2010. The agency’s survey is conducted though the first two weeks of September and covers 75,000 farms plus all domestic commercial grain-storage facilities. U.S. wheat output may be revised up to an eight-year high of 2.323 billion bushels, a separate survey showed.

Wheat for December delivery fell 1.1 percent to close at $3.99 a bushel in Chicago on Thursday. The Bloomberg Commodity Index, up 13 percent in the first six months of 2016, has since retreated 4.1 percent.

“We are back in a bear market scenario where supply exceeds demand,” said Jim Banachowsk­i, a vice president and general manager at The Andersons Inc., a grain merchandis­er in Ohio.

Like many commoditie­s, wheat is a victim of a longgone boom. Those high prices seen several years ago helped to open up a lot of land to production, Banachowsk­i said.

That expansion of acreage has eased in the U.S. after three years of declining prices, with farmers switching to other crops. Yet the impact of that trend has been offset by favorable weather boosting wheat yields to their highest ever. World inventorie­s before the 2017 harvest will rise to a third straight record, with U.S. stockpiles poised to jump to the most since 1988, according to the USDA.

U.S. growers probably will cut wheat plantings next season by as much as 3 million acres, which would mean the lowest sowings since USDA data began in 1919, said Chuck Elsea, senior vice president at grain supplier The Scoular Co. in Salina, Kan.

Scoular grain terminals in Kansas had a third of their temporary grain storage filled with wheat before the start of the corn and soybean harvests.

“I’ve never seen storagespa­ce issues as acute as they are now,” Elsea said. “The oversupply issue will last until there is a weather event somewhere in the world to reduce supply. We are the residual wheat supplier to the world markets.”

 ??  ?? A combine harvests wheat by a grain elevator in Kansas. Elevators are brimming with last year's crops due to lackluster exports and low prices. The Associated Press
A combine harvests wheat by a grain elevator in Kansas. Elevators are brimming with last year's crops due to lackluster exports and low prices. The Associated Press

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