Canola basis levels seen improving by mid-2011

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: March 11, 2011

,

Canola basis levels are now at levels that aren’t particularly favourable to producers, but one analyst believes levels will narrow within the next couple of months.

Mike Jubinville, president of Pro Farmer Canada in Winnipeg, said commercial companies presently have a surplus of product, but will be looking to buy in a couple of months.

“By around May, end-users will be running low on canola supplies, and be in need of purchasing. This traditionally happens around that time of year,” Jubinville said.

Bill Craddock, a southern Manitoba farmer and trader, agreed basis levels will start to narrow before too long.

Read Also

Photo: Dave Bedard

Bayer CEO: we will have to stop U.S. glyphosate production if nothing changes

Bayer on Wednesday said it would be forced to stop its U.S. production of widely-used farming weedkiller glyphosate unless regulatory or legal changes are made to stave of litigation that has been weighing on the German company.

“The elevators are at around $30 per (tonne). They should come in a bit because the supplies will disappear eventually here and they will pay up to get them,” he said.

Jubinville said spot basis levels are at about $30 per tonne in Manitoba, $35 in Saskatchewan, and $50-$60 in Alberta. He expects to see those levels decline anywhere from $5 to $10 by July, depending on the area.

“The levels aren’t narrowing as the price is coming down,” Craddock said. “End-users are taking full advantage of it.”

Craddock said he is somewhat surprised at how large the sell-off has been in the futures market, but said he wouldn’t be surprised to values return to a bullish bias.

“I still think the market will go higher as well, but it’s going to take this global uncertainty to leave. That’s what has been killing the markets,” he said.

About the author

GFM Network News

GFM Network News

Glacier FarmMedia Feed

Glacier FarmMedia, a division of Glacier Media, is Canada's largest publisher of agricultural news in print and online.

explore

Stories from our other publications