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No News is Bad News in the Grain Markets

By Marlin Clark
 
No news is supposed to be good news. In the news business, news tends to be about negative events — storms, terrorist activity, political intrigue. Hence, if there is nothing to write about, that is good.
 
In the grain business, no news is often bad news, and it is right now. No news means nothing has sparked the markets. No news means there is no fear of running out of feed or food.
 
That is where we are right now. We have posted two huge crops back to back, and prices reflect that. The good news was that, even in harvest, soybeans improved in price. That ended recently with a 70-some-cent decline in prices. We saw 9.55 on the March futures contract the 28th of December. It was not a good end to the year.
 
Little spark
 
January brought us a little spark in beans, up to 9.77 by the 5th, but a dime of that has gone away. Currently, on this Tuesday morning, Jan. 9, we are trading the March contract at 9.67, down three and a quarter cents.
 
The corn crop has been worse. We have bounced along near the contract low for months now, with small rallies six or eight cents higher. The 3.60-1⁄2 on Dec. 4 represented nearly 13 cents above the 3.46-1⁄2 low of Dec. 19, but yesterday we were back within a quarter of a cent of the low.
 
Hurting our prices right now is a market that is waiting for government reports out Friday, and traders that anticipate negative news in them. Right now we look for the corn and the bean crops to be finalized at even higher numbers than what were projected in December.
 
The reports are the USDA Crop Production annual Summary, which we call the “inventory report.” Also coming is the Dec. 1 Quarterly Stocks and the Winter Wheat Seeding. The Inventory Report is the most critical, although the grain stocks could help or hurt the prices regardless of the Inventory. The inventory report is seen as the first actual count of bushels in storage, as opposed to estimates of crop size.
 
Foundation of trading
 
As such, its numbers will be seen as the foundation of trading until something big happens to make this crop size irrelevant. That would have to be planted acres, or spring weather, or some unanticipated world political or geological event.
 
That is to say, after the report we are looking for a “Chernoble,” or a Krakatoa, or war with North Korea. Otherwise, prices remain stagnant.
 
That sounds dramatic, so I should just say that, some day prices will be higher, and after they are we will be able to say why. We need a drawdown of stocks or a decrease in production.
 
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