South West Crops Are Down, But Other U.S. Parts Are Stronger

Market Analysis

With the annual Kansas wheat crop tour occurring last week and the SW US experiencing extensive drought, the market's focus has been on field reports and daily wrap-ups from this 3-day event. The first day covered fields across northern Kansas where cold temperatures stunted growth and the tour's yield was 38.2 bu. vs. 43 last year. On the second day, the crop scouts traveled south from Colby into SW Kansas and then eastward to Wichita where this region was experiencing this year's SW drought resulting in a 35.2 bu. tour average vs. 5 yr average of 39.7 bu. The group returned to Manhattan where the group's average Kansas crop size came in at 243.3 million bu., the smallest since 1989, and the Wheat Quality Council calculating a 37 bu. state average yield. Overall, the USDA's first winter wheat crop is expected to be only 1.235 billion bu. vs. 2017's 1.269 billion bu. crop. This year's hard red crop has been hit the hardest with 661 million output vs. 750 million in 2017. However, 2018's soft red and white varieties appear to be larger than last year at 323 and 248 million bu. each.

After five years of record world wheat output, lead by a dramatic jump in Russia's output by 12.5 mmt to 85 mmt last year, the world's wheat output is seemed poised for a smaller outcome in 2018/19. The current dryness in the Black Sea and Australia could prompt a 7-10 mmt drop in world production resulting in a lower carryover if the world's consumption rises 1.5% in the coming year. To also help clarify the current world working supplies, the USDA is expected to separate China's stocks out of the world's total. This will show that much of past four years advance in ending stocks came from China, which doesn't participate in world trade. This makes the 6-7 major producers output more important.

With US export shipments faltering and spring wheat seedings rising, US supplies & stocks remain adequate.

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