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Ug 99

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Breaking News from MoneyNews.com

Experts Warn: Wheat Crop Failures Could be Total

On top of record-breaking rice prices and corn through the roof on ethanol demand, wheat is now rusting in the fields across Africa.

Officials fear near total crop losses, and the fungus, known as Ug99, is spreading.

Wheat prices have been soaring this week on top of already high prices, and futures contracts spiked, too, on panic buying.


Experts fear the cost of bread could soon follow the path of rice, the price of which has triggered riots in some countries and prompted countries to cut off exports.

David Kotok, chairman and chief investment officer of Cumberland Advisors, said the deadly fungus, Puccinia graminis, is now spreading through some areas of the globe where "crop losses are expected to reach 100 percent."

Losses in Africa are already at 70 percent of the crop, Kotok said.

"The economic losses expected from this fungus are now in the many billions and growing. Worse, there is an intensifying fear of exacerbated food shortages in poor and emerging countries of the world," Kotok told investors in a research note.

"The ramifications are serious. Food rioting continues to expand around the world. We saw the most recent in Johannesburg.

"So far this unrest has been directed at rising prices. Actual shortages are still to come."

Last month, scientists met in the Middle East to determine measures to track the progress of "Ug99," which was first discovered in 1999 in Uganda.

The fungus has spread from its initial outbreak site in Africa to Asia, including Iran and Pakistan. Spores of the fungus spread with the winds, according science journal reports.

According to the Food and Agriculture Office (FAO) of the United Nations, approximately a quarter of the world's global wheat harvest is currently threatened by the fungus.

Meanwhile, global wheat stocks are at lows not seen in half a century, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

Scientists fear that the spores could spread on the wind and reach the U.S. and Canada or Europe.

"It will take five to eight years to genetically engineer a resistance," said Kotok. "In the interim, U.S. agriculture faces higher risk."

Kotok is worried that governments around the globe are reacting to the crisis — which he believes is as big of a threat as bird flu — inappropriately by artificially lowering the prices of domestic wheat, and raising export taxes on wheat.

William Gamble, president of Emerging Market Strategies, tells MoneyNews that artificial mechanisms put in place by governments could be as much to blame for the crisis as anything.

"Twenty countries have put food in price controls or export restrictions," Gamble says.

"Others have restricted futures markets. It is the politicians who are interfering in the markets to protect themselves, and that causes the problem."
 
Thanks for always being so upbeat and cheery! The glass is always 1/2 full with you isn't it? I'm sure there are issues all over the world and I'm even more positive that you'll bring all of them to our attention. And when the sky offically falls, you can have the last laugh! I just get sick and tired of all the doom and gloom mentallity and folks missing out on all the wonderful things this ol' planet has going for it. I don't keep my head in the sand either. Sure there are troubles, but why waste time dwelling on something you have absolutey no power to do anything about? I think you and I must have polar opposite ways of looking at life. I guess i'll have to try and post upbeat, hopefull, inspiring stories to offset the holy cow were all gonna die, after we starve, and lose all body function to bad healthcare and invade Rhode Island because weve conquered the rest of the world stuff you seem to get a kick out'a putting on here. Yeah that's what i'll do..... either that or just skip reading your daily world's obituary. You have a nice day sir! :roll:
 
leanin' H said:
Thanks for always being so upbeat and cheery! The glass is always 1/2 full with you isn't it? I'm sure there are issues all over the world and I'm even more positive that you'll bring all of them to our attention. And when the sky offically falls, you can have the last laugh! I just get sick and tired of all the doom and gloom mentallity and folks missing out on all the wonderful things this ol' planet has going for it. I don't keep my head in the sand either. Sure there are troubles, but why waste time dwelling on something you have absolutey no power to do anything about? I think you and I must have polar opposite ways of looking at life. I guess i'll have to try and post upbeat, hopefull, inspiring stories to offset the holy cow were all gonna die, after we starve, and lose all body function to bad healthcare and invade Rhode Island because weve conquered the rest of the world stuff you seem to get a kick out'a putting on here. Yeah that's what i'll do..... either that or just skip reading your daily world's obituary. You have a nice day sir! :roll:

You must be the one looking at it thru the eyes of gloom and doom-- I thought it was a pretty positive outlook for this falls wheat prices-- but then again I raise wheat too :wink: :)

But if the reality of life- and whats happening in the world "skeers" you so bad- and you want to go stick your head in the sand- and not know whats happening- its no skin off my rear....
 
I read this earlier and thought to myself.(I bet Oldtimer will be growing all the wheat he can)
 
Denny said:
I read this earlier and thought to myself.(I bet Oldtimer will be growing all the wheat he can)

Yep-- and it got finished being seeded on Monday- and just got 1.45 rain on Thursday :) :) :) :D

I'm going up tomorrow and move the cows off the grass around the fields so when the first green spears start peeking thru- they don't get any of that golden stuff.... :wink: :D
 
Oldtimer said:
Denny said:
I read this earlier and thought to myself.(I bet Oldtimer will be growing all the wheat he can)

Yep-- and it got finished being seeded on Monday- and just got 1.45 rain on Thursday :) :) :) :D

I'm going up tomorrow and move the cows off the grass around the fields so when the first green spears start peeking thru- they don't get any of that golden stuff.... :wink: :D

I tried discing yeasterday it was very soft.I did a total of 20 ft and barely got out of there.I need another week to go on that ground.Around here not much has been planted other than some oats in the sand ground.It's tough just getting cows fed a wee bit muddy.
 
As many may remember--This Ug 99 rust is what devastated much of Africas and Asias wheat crops last year- and with the droughts in some areas of the world gave us $10 a bushel wheat- which with the help of the new ethanol energy policy then ended up giving us $20 a bushel wheat for awhile...With it happening again- the question is what will wheat be worth this year :???:
 

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