Wheat Ending Stocks May Fall Short of Estimates

Feb 06, 2018
 
A large section of the middle part of the United States, a major wheat growing region, is experiencing drought conditions that continue to worsen
 
A large section of the middle part of the United States, a major wheat growing region, is experiencing drought conditions that continue to worsen. Seventy-eight percent of the high plains and 83 percent of the southern plains are currently in a drought.
 
“This year’s wheat ending stocks will not be up around 900 to 950 million bushels in the U.S.,” said Mike Zuzolo of Global Commodity Analytics. “I think that number will be closer to the 800 million bushel level because we’re going to have lower harvested acres and a lower national yield.”
 
Oklahoma wheat conditions at last check were close to 80 percent in the poor to very poor categories and Kansas wheat conditions most recently came in at almost 45 percent.
 
“I really think we are in a situation where these next 30 days, if we don’t see relief in the hard red wheat belt, we will curb production,” Zuzolo said. “A crop insurance agent told me he is getting calls from producers in northeastern Kansas asking for adjusters to come out to look at their wheat for potential winter kill and those farmers may be tearing their wheat up, taking a thirty-five percent hit on the crop insurance and then coming back in with a brand new crop and complete coverage for that crop.”
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