Canary seed prices slowly trend downward

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: September 17, 2013

,

Despite significantly lower production expectations this year and tight carryover supplies, Canadian canary seed prices are seen continuing to slowly move lower as harvest approaches.

According to Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s August outlook for principal field crops, canary seed production is expected to drop by 50,000 tonnes this year, while carryout stocks are expected to be cut in half from the previous season.

Tight supplies and lower acreage “should equal out to something that should push the price, but it’s been tight supplies and low acres for the past few years on canary, and nobody ever seems to care,” said Kent Anholt, assistant operations manager with Rayglen Commodities in Saskatoon.

Read Also

Canary seed prices slowly trend downward

Entomologist tests trap crops and marigolds to repel flea beetles at an Ag in Motion

An Agriculture Canada entomologist is experimenting with trap crops and marigolds at an Ag in Motion demonstration cropplot

“They have been slowly working their way down due to a lack of demand.”

As of Monday, Prairie Ag Hotwire had FOB farm canary seed as high as 25 cents per pound, but Anholt said prices have dropped into the 23 to 24 cents per pound range.

If demand starts to pick up, prices could gain back some cents, Anholt added.

“It’s tough to say where prices go,” he said. “It depends on whether some demand comes to the table or not. If somebody comes back to buy, yeah, we could definitely see some cents, but if we don’t anything from someone looking to buy, it’s going to stay quiet.”

Going into harvest in the next week or so, Anholt said crops vary in condition around the province, so there could be reports of very different yields.

“Some crops are not good and some are,” he said. “It’s a little bit of a mixed basket.”

— Brandon Logan writes for Commodity News Service Canada, a Winnipeg company specializing in grain and commodity market reporting.

explore

Stories from our other publications