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This Article is From May 11, 2024

US Sees Tighter World Grain Supplies, Sending Prices Higher

World wheat stockpiles for the 2024-25 season were estimated at 253.6 million metric tons, below the average estimate and the lowest level in eight years.

US Sees Tighter World Grain Supplies, Sending Prices Higher
Harvested wheat unloaded in a grain storage warehouse near Kastoria, in the western Macedonia region, Greece, on Saturday, July 22, 2023. As scorching temperatures ravage farms from the US to China, crop harvests, fruit production and dairy output are all coming under pressure. Photographer: Konstantinos Tsakalidis/Bloomberg

Global grain supplies will be tighter in the coming season, setting the stage for higher prices for agricultural commodities as economies are still coping with stubborn inflation, according to a key US forecast.

World wheat stockpiles for the 2024-25 season were estimated at 253.6 million metric tons, below the average estimate and the lowest level in eight years, according to the US Department of Agriculture's first such forecast.

The outlook comes amid small on-hand grain supplies and worries that adverse weather will hit oncoming harvests, with cold weather in top wheat-exporting Russia among the concerns. Russia will remain the world's top exporter, but is expected to ship less in the season beginning July 1 than the previous one, according to the USDA.

World corn supplies of 312.3 million tons came in about 2.1% below the average estimate.

Wheat futures surged as much as 3.7% to $6.6075 a bushel, the highest intraday in about nine months. Corn climbed as much as 2.6%.

Damaged Soybeans

The agency lowered its estimate for Brazil's current soybean harvest 154 million tons, down 1 million tons from last month. The agency made the cut due to flooding in Rio Grande do Sul state. Still, the soybean crop that farmers in Brazil, the world's top producer, will start planting later this year could reach a record 169 million tons, according to USDA.

American supplies of soybeans are also projected to be bigger than traders expected.

The report was “friendly for grains and bearish for soybeans,” Marex analyst Terry Reilly said. 

--With assistance from Dominic Carey and Gerson Freitas Jr..

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2024 Bloomberg L.P.

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