Column-World wheat squeeze set to worsen into 2023, price risks remain -Braun

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[May 13, 2022]  By Karen Braun

NAPERVILLE, Ill. (Reuters) - Despite global wheat prices trading at record highs for the time of year, market participants may have been too optimistic on the supply outlook for the upcoming year if the U.S. government’s new projections are any indication.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture on Thursday pegged world wheat ending stocks for the 2022-23 marketing year at 267 million tonnes, a six-year low, well below analyst estimates of 272 million.

But relative to estimated global demand, wheat supplies for the upcoming cycle are seen dangerously close to all-time lows and notably below this year’s reduced levels.

When excluding China, world wheat stocks-to-use for 2022-23 falls to 14.9% from 16.4% this year, and it would be the fourth lowest ever. The record of 14.3% was set in 2007-08, and the average from mid-last decade was 19%.

That could keep wheat prices elevated into 2023, impacting food prices for consumers globally and ensuring continued high costs for importer countries. Further risks to 2022-23 wheat supplies are possible.
 


Most-active Chicago wheat futures hit a two-month high of $11.83 per bushel on Thursday. Futures in mid-May had traded in the lower $8-range in 2008 and 2011, the month’s highest prior to 2022.

Paris-traded Euronext wheat hit contract highs on Thursday with September reaching 416.25 euros per tonne.

USDA's Thursday estimates were its first for the 2022-23 cycle.

Graphic- World wheat stocks-to-use minus China: https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
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NARROW OUTLOOK

One of the most surprising forecasts on Thursday was U.S. hard red winter wheat production from USDA’s statistics service at 590 million bushels. Analysts were expecting 685 million, already far off last year’s 749 million. It would be the United States’ smallest HRW harvest since 1963.

Condition ratings in U.S. HRW states are terrible, among the worst ever, though history indicates that USDA’s prediction could be reasonable. In the last decade, USDA’s May HRW forecast was substantially closer on average to the final in poor-yielding years than in strong ones.

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A combine drives over stalks of soft red winter wheat during the harvest on a farm in Dixon, Illinois, July 16, 2013. REUTERS/Jim Young

But the U.S. spring wheat crop is of major concern and could limit the country’s output. As of Sunday, the planting pace was the slowest since 2011 and top producer North Dakota had sown just 8% of the crop versus 37% average. More rains this week may have worsened delays.

Ukraine's situation also brings great uncertainty to the wheat market as Russian military still occupies parts of the country, normally a top five exporter. USDA pegged Ukraine's 2022-23 wheat harvest, which was planted last fall, at 21.5 million tonnes, a 10-year low and down 35% on the year.

Ukraine's wheat exports were pegged at just 10 million tonnes, down 47% on the year and a nine-year low.
 

Top wheat exporter Russia's crop is forecast to rise more than 6% on the year, but USDA predicts smaller 2022-23 crops in major suppliers Argentina, Australia, India and the European Union by a collective 4%. Unfavorable weather in France and India could pressure volumes there.

Canada's wheat harvest is set to rebound 50% from last year's drought-stricken catastrophe, though the planting pace and dry conditions are being eyed by analysts. USDA shows the total U.S. crop rising 5% on the year, but that is completely driven by tentative spring wheat assumptions.

China, which is often excluded from global grain analyses due to its stockpiling habit, is slated to have a record 53% of the world's wheat in storage by mid-2023.

Karen Braun is a market analyst for Reuters. Views expressed above are her own.

(Editing by Sam Holmes)

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