2nd Jul 2012, by Agrimoney
The International Grains Council slashed its estimate for world grain stocks at the close of 2012-13 to a five-year low, citing reduced expectations for wheat production and upgraded hopes for corn demand.
The intergovernmental group, which had been expecting global grain inventories to rise over the season, changed its forecast to a 9m-tonne decline, to 360m tonnes – the lowest supply figure since 2007-08.
The downgrade - which took to 23m tonnes the extent of the world grain harvest that the IGC believes has been lost in the last two months, as heat and dryness have tested crops in China, the former Soviet Union and the US – reflected in the main reduced hopes for wheat production.
"The outlook for world wheat production in 2012-13 continued to be affected by unfavourable conditions in some countries, including a further deterioration in crop expectations in Russia," the council said.
The estimate for wheat production was trimmed to 665m tonnes, representing a 30m-tonne decline on last year's crop.
The Russian harvest itself was downgraded by 6.0m tonnes to 49.0m tonnes.
US vs China
However, corn supplies too will prove more scarce than had been expected, thanks to an 8m-tonne upgrade, to 910m tonnes, in the forecast for consumption, led by the need to keep fed growing livestock numbers.
"With meat consumption expected to increase, feed/residual demand is expected to rise at an above-trend 6%," the IGC said.
While industrial consumption "will likely climb to new record levels… the growth rate will be subdued and again tied to firmer demand for starch and sweeteners in China".
The forecast for world corn output was actually edged higher, by 4m tonnes to 917m tonnes, despite the concern over the US crops which sent Chicago futures to a fresh nine-month high on Monday.
Although the US crop, the world's biggest, was downgraded by 5m tonnes to 350m tonnes, "prospects elsewhere have become brighter, particularly in China and India".
Tight supplies
The downgrade in world stocks of grains overall, a set which includes the likes of barley, oats and sorghum too, leaves the stock-to-use ratio at 19.2%, the lowest indeed since the 18.1% in 2007-08.
The stocks-to-use ratio is a much-watched metric in commodity markets, signalling the availability of a raw material and therefore the level of competition among buyers, which will have a big impact on prices.
For wheat, while the stocks-to-use ratio remains at a relatively high 26.7% even in the latest data, the proportion of supplies in the hands of leading exporters, rather than tied up in countries such as China and India which tend not to sell, will show a sharp decline.
At 58m tonnes, sapped by poor prospects for Russian output, it will end 2012-13 at a five-year low.
"Smaller export surpluses in the Black Sea region will see demand switch to other origins in the year ahead, especially the US," the IGC said.
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