Finally, a more settled spell of weather over the last two
weeks has seen a huge amount of activity in our region with farmers desperate
to catch up with drilling, fertiliser application and spraying. Most spring cereal and bean crops on light
and medium bodied land have now been drilled, with only the trickier, heavy
land remaining. I am often asked how late spring barley can be drilled; the
answer completely depends on individual conditions at the time, all I will say
is that many customers I deal with harvested successful spring barley crops in
2016 that weren’t drilled until May.
The last month has also seen an advance in old crop prices.
May’18 feed wheat is currently trading between £154-£156/t, with those willing
to hold on until July/early August likely to make £160/t. This is down largely
to the re-opening of the Vivergo plant in Hull, furthering the demand for feed
wheat in a region already in deficit. Moreover, dwindling on-farm stocks and
the sense that harvest is certainly not approaching quickly is not
incentivising many people to sell.
New-crop is remaining fairly level with values trading at
£144-£146/t and £149-£151/t for harvest and November respectively. Most regular
forward-sellers have likely taken cover at, or near, these values and until
either markets move upwards or crops markedly improve, it is unlikely that many
people will be enticed to sell much new crop at these current levels. Few
growers in the region would at this point imagine they are heading towards a bumper
harvest, especially with the condition spring crops have been drilled in (or
not drilled!). If at least one of Ensus or Vivergo is running throughout the
back-end, demand for feed wheat in the North will remain strong, and so unless
the pound strengthens significantly, values will remain relatively firm.
Old crop feed barley has continued its meteoric rise, now virtually at parity with feed wheat
depending on location, and only £7-£8/t less than full spec milling wheat!
Whether the demand for barley will reduce as farmers turn stock out remains to
be seen over the next few weeks, however with very little left on farm, prices
are unlikely to nose-dive. New crop barley also looks more attractive, with
forward prices £10-£12/t below wheat, but again you would imagine a lot of next
year’s trade will hinge on how well spring barley crops perform.
Oilseed Rape (OSR) continues to be the dog of this marketing
year; old crop values remain at £284-£286/t (depending on location) and are
seemingly range-bound to a maximum of around £290/t. It seems at this point as
though OSR has run its race, with large imports in the winter meeting the
demand from the UK crush. One can never rule out a late rally but it certainly
feels unlikely at the moment. New crop values are equally uninspiring; £286/t
for November, with harvest £10/t less, is hardly likely to induce much
forward-selling at this point.
Fertiliser markets are gearing up for the new season trade
to begin, with prices for AN and Urea expected in the next month. That said,
there are still reasonable old-season offers available for those with
purchasing still to do. Imported AN is some £23/t cheaper than UK product at
the moment, with May delivery at £219/t and NPK products, such as 20.10.10,
still available at £245/t.