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U.S. Wheat Stocks Lowest Since 46/47

Mike

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USDA March World Ag Supply and Demand Estimates Report(Wheat stock-to-use lowest since 46/47)
USDA/Cornell Univ ^ | 03/11/08



WASDE-456 March 11, 2008

WHEAT: Projected U.S. wheat ending stocks for 2007/08 are lowered 30 million bushels this month on higher projected food use and exports. Food use is raised 5 million bushels based on the latest mill grind data from the U.S. Bureau of Census. Hard red spring wheat food use is increased on indications that discounts for spring wheat relative to winter during the first half of the marketing year encouraged heavier use. Exports are raised 25 million bushels based on the pace of export sales and shipments and on continued export restrictions by major competitor countries. Despite record prices, export commitments for U.S. wheat continue to accumulate raising prospects for higher exports of hard red winter, hard red spring, and durum wheat than projected last month. Ending stocks are projected at 242 million bushels with stocks-to-use dropping to 10 percent, the lowest since 1946/47. The projected range for the season-average farm price is narrowed 5 cents on each end to $6.50 to $6.80 per bushel.


(Excerpt) Read more at usda.mannlib.cornell.edu ...
 
As much as I hate the United Nations, they do keep up with global supply on agriculture. 2009/2010 are supposed to be critical and they are already having food riots in other countries.

Until we stop giving subsidies on ethanol production which is lowering other grain crops production, there will continue to be food shortages............. can you imagine how much food is going to increase???? I bet by this time next year you have to work an hour to buy a box of cereal and a gallon of milk.
 
First of all, 99% of the corn grown in this country is field corn. The corn in a box of cereal used to be 2.2 cents. Now if the price of corn doubled, that would still make it about a nickel a box. The rising cost of fuel and retailers greed are what is driving food prices, not the price of grain! Ethanol has been a pretty convenient scapegoat for a lot of companies. The price of that box of corn flakes has damn sure gone up more then the nickels worth of corn in it and retailers have been showing record profits while blaming the price of corn & ethanol.

It amazes me that people will pay over $3.00 a gal. for the fuel to get to the store and then bench about .05 cents worth of corn in the box! What is the value of wheat in a box or a loaf of bread ? Probably not much!

This post is not directed at anyone. It just pi$$es me off that people accept being held at gunpoint by some camel jockeys who can charge what they want for their oil, and then bench about farmers getting back the input costs on their crops without the government having to keep them afloat! We have to start somewhere!
Brazil runs their country on ethanol !
 
With an average loaf of bread at about $3 a loaf, according to Cal Gerlach of Cal's Thriftway in California, many people might think it is because of higher wheat prices.

Although the cost of wheat is up-running about $8.50 a bushel at press time-the wheat is a minor part of the cost of a loaf of bread.

According to National Agricultural Statistics Service (NASS), when wheat was $5.25 per bushel, there was about 10 cents worth of wheat in 20-ounce loaf of bread. With wheat at $8.50 a bushel the cost of wheat in a loaf of bread is about 18 cents.

So, why then is the average cost of a loaf of bread around $3? Much of it appears to be the cost of energy.

According to the NASS, the cost of a loaf of bread involves more than just the ingredients-the cost of fuel to transport the ingredients to the bakery and the finished product to wholesale and retail outlets, the energy to heat the ovens, the packaging, the equipment and the labor required at every stage of the production, delivery, marketing and sales process.

When each of those costs is further broken down, the NASS said most of the increase in the price of a loaf of bread-even the packaging is made from petrochemicals-can actually be tracked back in one way or another to the increase in the price of energy of all kinds.

According to Gerlach, oil prices have increased to the point that the invoice for a truckload of grocery items now includes an additional amount for the cost of the fuel, usually called "fuel surcharge," to transport the products.

"That's a cost that can't be passed on to the consumer and remain competitive," Gerlach said. "When it's an item added to the bottom of an invoice of several thousand items, there's no way to include it in the cost of the products."
 
I think you miss the point because more countries are growing corn for ethanol and not growing other gran products..... so yes, the subsidies in ethanol have caused this.

Yes, I can see where high energy prices do play a part. Imports are going up, start checking out Walmart prices, they haven't been cheap for a long time.
 
MoGal said:
I think you miss the point because more countries are growing corn for ethanol and not growing other gran products..... so yes, the subsidies in ethanol have caused this.

Yes, I can see where high energy prices do play a part. Imports are going up, start checking out Walmart prices, they haven't been cheap for a long time.

I think you're the one missing the point, MoGal. When wheat increases from $5.25/bu to $8.50/bu, and that translates to an actual cost per loaf increase from 10 cents to 18 cents, you can only peg 8 cents of the price increase of the bread on the wheat price increase. At $3/loaf, that is less than 3%. With that in mind, how can you blame ethanol? Clearly, the cost increases - if there really are any - are coming from someplace else.
 
You guys are right about the actual amount of wheat in a loaf of bread but there are other factors to consider when considering the price of food.

The value of the dollar plays a huge role here too.

We have rapidly emerging economies in other parts of the world, China, India, and others that are rapidly improving their lifestyles. Couple this with a cheap dollar and that means our products are cheaper to them and they are essentially competing with the US consumer for those goods and services. They have essentially gained 30 to 40% relative to our dollar. It makes them a very tough tough competitor from a buying power standpoint and if the US consumer doesn't increase what they are willing to pay, the products will get exported. The grain markets have reacted to this and have had to increase the price domestically in order to keep the wheat, corn and soybeans needed for our own processors and consumers.

It works against us too when we go to import products. It takes more of our dollars to buy foreign goods than it did just a year ago. We import a lot of OIL and we import a lot of food. Every time the FEd reduces interest rates in order to save these big banks from financial meltdown from making bad loans, it lowers the value of the dollar. A lot of other factors affect the dollar too, even presidential elections!.

Blaming ethanol for our increased food costs is living in fantasy land. Grain markets don't operate in a vacuum as many of these studies seem to think. In fact, the ethanol program has brought a lot of land into production that otherwise wouldn't have been in production. Its a world market and ethanol is only a very small sliver of that market.
 
Just curious, since ethanol really only bumped corn to about 4 bucks....what are the rest of you whinners blaming the other buck or so on????
Just curious....I would start with high transportation cost and the devalued dollar.
The reality is .....90 cents fats and a buck/quarter feeders and 5 dollar corn is about right! 100 dollar a barrel oil is just screwing us!
 
wheat may go even higher......

http://www.financialsense.com/editorials/engdahl/2008/0331.html
WHY FOOD PRICES WILL GO THROUGH
THE ROOF IN COMING MONTHS
by F. William Engdahl
March 31, 2008

A deadly fungus, known as Ug99, which kills wheat, has likely spread to Pakistan from Africa according to reports. If true, that threatens the vital Asian Bread Basket including the Punjab region. The spread of the deadly virus, stem rust, against which an effective fungicide does not exist, comes as world grain stocks reach the lowest in four decades and government subsidized bio-ethanol production, especially in the USA, Brazil and EU are taking land out of food production at alarming rates. The deadly fungus is being used by Monsanto and the US Government to spread patented GMO seeds.

Stem rust is the worst of three rusts that afflict wheat plants. The fungus grows primarily in the stems, plugging the vascular system so carbohydrates can't get from the leaves to the grain, which shrivels. Ug99 is a race of stem rust that blocks the vascular tissues in cereal grains including wheat, oats and barley. Unlike other rusts that may reduce crop yields, Ug99-infected plants may suffer up to 100 percent loss.

In the 1950s, the last major outbreak destroyed 40% of the spring wheat crop in North America. At that time governments started a major effort to breed resistant wheat plants, led by Norman Borlaug of the Rockefeller Foundation. That was the misnamed Green Revolution. The result today is far fewer varieties of wheat that might resist such a new fungus outbreak.

The first strains of Ug99 were detected in 1999 in Uganda. It spread to Kenya by 2001, to Ethiopia by 2003 and to Yemen when the cyclone Gonu spread its spores in 2007. Now the deadly fungus has been found in Iran and according to British scientists may already be as far as Pakistan.

Pakistan and India account for 20 percent of the annual world wheat production. It is possible as the fungus spreads that large movements could take place almost overnight if certain wind conditions prevail at the right time. In 2007 a three-day wind event recorded by Mexico's CIMMYT (International Maize and Wheat Improvement Center), had strong wind currents moving from Yemen, where Ug99 is present, across Pakistan and India, going all the way to China. CIMMYT estimates that from two-thirds to three-quarters of the wheat now planted in India and Pakistan are highly susceptible to this new strain of stem rust. One billion people who live in this region and they are highly dependent on wheat for their food supply

These are all areas where the agricultural infrastructure to contain such problems is either extremely weak or non-existent. It threatens to spread into other wheat producing regions of Asia and eventually the entire world if not checked.

FAO World Grain Forecast

The 2007 World Agriculture Forecast of the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Rome, projects an alarming trend in world food supply even in the absence of any devastation from Ug99. The report states, "countries in the non-OECD region are expected to continue to experience a much stronger increase in consumption of agricultural products than countries in the OECD area. This trend is driven by population and, above all, income growth – underpinned by rural migration to higher income urban areas...OECD countries as a group are projected to lose production and export shares in many commodities…Growth in the use of agricultural commodities as feedstock to a rapidly increasing biofuel industry is one of the main drivers in the outlook and one of the reasons for international commodity prices to attain a significantly higher plateau over the outlook period than has been reported in the previous reports." (my emphasis—w.e.).

The FAO warns that the explosive growth in acreage used to grow fuels and not food in the past three years is dramatically changing the outlook for food supply globally and forcing food prices sharply higher for all foods from cereals to sugar to meat and dairy products. The use of cereals, sugar, oilseeds and vegetable oils to satisfy the needs of a rapidly

increasing bio-fuel industry, is one of the main drivers, most especially the large volumes of maize in the US, wheat and rapeseed in the EU and sugar in Brazil for ethanol and bio-diesel production. This is already causing dramatically higher crop prices, higher feed costs and sharply higher prices for livestock products.

Ironically, the current bio-ethanol industry is being driven by US government subsidies and a scientifically false argument in the EU and USA that bio-ethanol is less harmful to the environment than petroleum fuels and can reduce CO2 emissions. The arguments have been demonstrated in every respect to be false. The huge expansion of global acreage now planted to produce bio-fuels is creating ecological problems and demanding use of far heavier pesticide spraying while use of bio-fuels in autos releases even deadlier emissions than imagined. The political effect, however, has been a catastrophic shift down in world grain stocks at the same time the EU and USA have enacted policies which drastically cut traditional emergency grain reserves. In short, it is a scenario pre-programmed for catastrophe, one which has been clear to policymakers in the EU and USA for several years. That can only suggest that such a dramatic crisis in global food supply is intentional.

A plan to spread GMO?

One of the consequences of the spread of Ug99 is a campaign by Monsanto Corporation and other major producers of genetically manipulated plant seeds to promote wholesale introduction of GMO wheat varieties said to be resistant to the Ug99 fungus. Biologists at Monsanto and at the various GMO laboratories around the world are working to patent such strains.

Norman Borlaug, the former Rockefeller Foundation head of the Green Revolution is active in funding the research to develop a fungus resistant variety against Ug99 working with his former center in Mexico, the CIMMYT and ICARDA in Kenya, where the pathogen is now endemic. So far, about 90% of the 12,000 lines tested are susceptible to Ug99. That includes all the major wheat cultivars of the Middle East and west Asia. At least 80% of the 200 varieties sent from the United States can't cope with infection. The situation is even more dire for Egypt, Iran, and other countries in immediate peril.

Even if a new resistant variety was ready to be released today it would take two or three years' seed increase in order to have just enough wheat seed for 20 percent of the acres planted to wheat in the world.

Work is also being done by the USDA's Agricultural Research Service (ARS), the same agency which co-developed Monsanto's Terminator seed technology. In my book, Seeds of Destruction I document the insidious role of Borlaug and the Rockefeller Foundation in promoting the misnamed Green Revolution as well as patents on food seeds to ultimately control food supplies as a potential political lever. The spreading alarm over the Ug99 fungus is being used by Monsanto and other GMO agribusiness companies to demand that the current ban on GMO wheat be lifted to allow spread of GMO patented wheat seeds on the argument they are Ug99 stem rust resistant.


© 2008 F. William Engdahl
Editorial Archive

F. William Engdahl is the author of A Century of War: Anglo-American Oil Politics and the New World Order (Pluto Press) and Seeds of Destruction: The Hidden Agenda of Genetic Manipulation, www.globalresearch.ca. The present series is adapted from his new book, now in writing, The Rise and Fall of the American Century: Money and Empire in Our Era. He may be contacted through his website, www.engdahl.oilgeopolitics.net.

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