World Markets

Corn prices received little support from last week’s USDA Crop  Production report containing a lower forecast for the size of the US  crop.  The US average corn yield is projected at an eight year low of  146.7 bushels, 1.4 bushels below the October forecast.   
The potentially positive price impact of that reduction was muted by  USDA’s judgment that feed and residual use of corn will only reach 4.6  billion bushels during the current marketing year, 100 million below the  October forecast.  The forecast is 192 million bushels below the  surprisingly small estimate for the previous marketing year.  The lower  forecast for the current year was not offset by an increase in the  projection for feed use of other grains.   
The projection of domestic soybean meal feeding was also reduced  marginally.  The lower projection of feed and residual use of corn  reflects prospects for reduced broiler production as placements continue  to run six to eight per cent below the pace of a year ago.  Although  not cited as a factor for the reduction, the recent slowdown in exports  of distillers grain may boost domestic feeding of that product.   
The pace of domestic feed and residual use of corn will be revealed in  the USDA’s 1 December Grain Stocks report to be released on 12 January.   The experience of the past two years, however, suggests that the level  of domestic feed and residual use may remain uncertain until the 1  September, 2012 socks estimate is released. 
Ethanol production during the first 10 weeks of the 2011-12 marketing  year was about 2.2 per cent larger than during the same period of a year  ago.  While uncertainty persists about ethanol demand and production  without the blenders’ tax credit in 2012, the current pace of production  supports the USDA projection of five billion bushels of corn used for  ethanol this year.   
Ethanol exports, particularly to Brazil, are a major part of the current  increase in ethanol production.  Those exports are vulnerable in the  longer term if world sugar production rebounds and sugar prices  moderate. 
The USDA still expects US corn exports during the current marketing to  be at a nine year low of 1.6 billion bushels. Exports have been less  than 1.6 billion bushels only six times in the past 36 years.  Through  10 November, the pace of weekly export inspections continued to run well  below the average pace needed to reach the USDA projection.   
The Census Bureau corn export estimate for September was not  substantially larger than the USDA inspection estimate.  The level of  outstanding sales is larger than that of a year ago, but new sales were  small in the latest reporting week ended 3 November. 
The USDA’s November forecast of the US average soybean yield of 41.3  bushels was 0.2 bushels below the October forecast and 2.3 bushels below  the 2010 average.  The forecast represents the lowest yield since 2008  and the second lowest since 2003.   
Like corn, the lower yield and production forecast generated little  price strength due to a 50 million bushel reduction in the forecast of  exports and a 35 million bushel increase in the forecast of year ending  stocks.  The pace of US soybean exports remains well below that of last  year.  However, the anemic pace of new sales in the last two weeks of  October was followed by large new sales in the week ended 3 November.   Production prospects remain generally favorable in South America,  although USDA made a modest reduction of the forecast of acreage in  Argentina and Paraguay.  Those reductions were offset by larger yield  forecasts for Brazil and Paraguay. 
While futures prices for corn remain in a relatively narrow range, basis  levels generally remain quite strong and at record levels for this time  of year in some markets.  Spreads in futures remain very choppy, with  the December-July spread fluctuating between 18 and 23 cents.  The  apparent battle between current demand strength and expected weakness in  2012 continues.  In contrast, soybean basis remains near typical levels  and spreads are generally large.  The January-July spread, for example,  is near 30 cents, compared to only about 5 cents in early September.   The weak basis and the relatively large carry reflect the generally weak  demand situation. 
For now, January soybean futures are holding just above the early  October lows while December corn futures are well above the early  October lows, but near the low end of the recent trading range.  The  recent sideways trading pattern might persist for an extended period,  but the deterioration of market fundamentals suggests that prices could  drift lower into the winter months.






















