November canola back above 30-day average

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: October 7, 2014

,

(Dave Bedard photo)

CNS Canada –– A record-large U.S. soybean crop remains a bearish anchor on Canadian canola futures — but recent activity has shifted some technical indicators higher.

The November canola contract on ICE Futures Canada has held consistently below the 30-day moving average since May, but finally settled above that line on Monday. The 30-day moving average is compiled by calculating the mean closing price of the previous 30 sessions.

The November contract corrected back down to the moving average (now at roughly $410 per tonne) on Tuesday, but bounced off what is now support to finish above the moving average for the second straight session. The November contract settled Tuesday at $412.90 per tonne.

Read Also

November canola back above 30-day average

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

Speculative funds are said to be holding very large short positions of over 40,000 contracts, according to some market participants — and the move above back above a level that had provided consistent resistance for months could trigger a larger short-covering bounce.

The 50-day moving average comes in at $420 per tonne, which could provide the next upside target.

— Phil Franz-Warkentin writes for Commodity News Service Canada, a Winnipeg company specializing in grain and commodity market reporting.

About the author

Phil Franz-Warkentin

Phil Franz-Warkentin

Editor - Daily News

Phil Franz-Warkentin grew up on an acreage in southern Manitoba and has reported on agriculture for over 20 years. Based in Winnipeg, his writing has appeared in publications across Canada and internationally. Phil is a trusted voice on the Prairie radio waves providing daily futures market updates. In his spare time, Phil enjoys playing music and making art.

explore

Stories from our other publications