Weekly Commodity Review - 7 - 11 May 2012
Weekly Commodity Review - 7 - 11 May 2012
Weekly Commodity Review - 7 - 11 May 2012
Sugar/Soybeans/Wheat: Overweight
The China Sugar Association says China produced 707,850 metric tonnes of sugar, white value, in April 2012, up from 554,400 tonnes in the same month last year. On the other hand, Sugarcane mills in top sugar producer Brazil's main growing state should see favourable weather this month, after an unusually rainy April delayed the start of the 2012/13 harvest, according to Dow Jones. That's good news for sugar and ethanol producers, whose machines can't harvest cane as effectively when the ground is wet from rain. Less rainfall from now through the end of the harvest also bodes well for the quality of the cane since it allows sugars to become concentrated in the plants. US soybean prices came under some pressure in the past week with the old crop contracts leading the way lower. On a monthly basis US soybean contracts ended mixed with old crop prices gaining 1.4% while new crop prices gave up 0.92% in the past month. US soybean old crop contracts reached a multi-year high of 15.12/bushel early in May but the market sold off after that. US soybean contracts became heavily overbought and some liquidation followed which pressured especially old crop prices. Another factor that pressured US soybean contracts in the past week was the weakness seen in the outside markets. The dollar gained some solid ground breaking below 1.30 and nonagricultural commodities came under some pressure which also limited the buying in the US grain and oilseed markets. Bearing in mind that the investment funds are holding on to a record net long position, this makes the market vulnerable to a pullback.