Search Site   
News Stories at a Glance
Miami County family receives Hoosier Homestead Awards 
OBC culinary studio to enhance impact of beef marketing efforts
Baltimore bridge collapse will have some impact on ag industry
Michigan, Ohio latest states to find HPAI in dairy herds
The USDA’s Farmers.gov local dashboard available nationwide
Urban Acres helpng Peoria residents grow food locally
Illinois dairy farmers were digging into soil health week

Farmers expected to plant less corn, more soybeans, in 2024
Deere 4440 cab tractor racked up $18,000 at farm retirement auction
Indiana legislature passes bills for ag land purchases, broadband grants
Make spring planting safety plans early to avoid injuries
   
Archive
Search Archive  
   
Views and opinions: USDA reopens, sets new dates for critical reports

 

The reopening of the government and Chinese trade conversations dominated headlines last week, with the former playing catch-up and the latter loaded with fodder for both buyers and sellers.

A short-term resolution to the government shutdown was announced late last Friday as lawmakers put aside their differences, funding the government through Feb. 15. The funding allowed offices closed for well over a month to reopen – this included the USDA, Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) and others – also allowing for those employees working without pay throughout the shutdown to receive those delayed paychecks.

With funding restored the USDA fully reopened Jan. 28, and announced when the reports that had been delayed during the shutdown would be released. The much-anticipated January figures, quarterly stocks, wheat plantings, final crop production and WASDE will be released on Feb. 8.

In addition to the updated release dates for the monthly reports, we also learned it is going to take around three weeks to get up to date on export sales and CFTC data. The USDA and CFTC are releasing December data over the next couple weeks while they compile the total data through January and into the first weeks of February, hoping to be caught up by Feb. 22.

This is if lawmakers can come up with a funding agreement that satisfies the Trump administration’s request for border wall funding, as failure to find a compromise by Feb. 15 would likely result in another shutdown.

Last week’s export sales report was from the week of Dec. 20, and came in better than what was expected in pre-report estimates released that week ahead of the shutdown. This obviously wasn’t much of a surprise to trade, though, as grain movement on the export side of things can be monitored by freight and basis changes after the fact.

In addition to the reopening of the government last week traders monitored Chinese trade talks Wednesday and Thursday, as high-level representatives for both countries sat down in Washington, D.C. While news from the talks was relatively quiet last Wednesday, rumors, confirmation and revisions dominated the news cycle after the close on Thursday.

When doors opened at the end of the day, a letter from the Chinese delegation was delivered to the Trump administration and read. Excitement ensued when talk of China agreeing to purchase 5 million metric tons of soybeans a day was announced.

At first many felt this headline was simply a typo, but then it was confirmed several times as true; however, China purchasing 5 million tons a day would in fact wipe out our carryout in a little over five days, bringing the reality of this claim into question.

After a state dinner Thursday evening a correction was issued, claiming an error in translation. The letter in fact referenced a 5 million-ton purchase “today,” not “per day,” definitely changing the overall message as a whole.

This additional purchase is likely to take place over the coming days and weeks and will take total Chinese purchases this crop year up to 10 million tons, in line with promises made shortly after the trade truce was announced. While any purchases are good, especially in this current market structure, 10 million is around 15 million (551 million bushels) below what China had purchased from the United States last marketing year.

We did hear talk that China would buy 300 million gallons of ethanol from the U.S. as part of the trade package. This would be huge for the industry, as we saw last week’s production numbers show a 19,000-barrel cut in daily ethanol production but stocks still ballooned to near record-high levels.

The U.S. is not the only one holding high-level trade talks with China. Brazil made it clear they are looking to capture more of China’s agriculture imports ahead of last week’s sit-down, that’s been four years in the making. The Brazilian government also announced plans to have BR-163 – the often talked-about road that carries much of Brazil’s ag exports from field to export terminals – fully paved in 2019.

 

Angie Setzer is the Vice President of Grain for Citizens Elevator in Charlotte, Mich. Her market commentary can be found on Twitter by @GoddessofGrain and online at www.citizenselevator.com

The opinions and views in this commentary are solely those of Angie Setzer. Data used for this commentary obtained from various sources are believed to be accurate.

2/8/2019