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Dec. 14, 2016 AgriMoney.com reports: Next year could prove a "turning point" for grain and oilseed prices, MetLife said, saying that official estimates for the latest US harvest may be too large, and foreseeing a global production "pullback". The insurance giant, whose agriculture division is one of North America's top farm mortgage lenders, said that market ideas of this year's record corn and soybean harvests appear "too high", questioning some of the assumptions behind US Department of Agriculture's estimates. While the USDA has estimated this year's US corn yield at a record 175.3 bushels per acre, and the soybean result at a record 52.5 bushels per acre, "we view that smaller-sized ears and pods could trim final yields", MetLife said. Downgrades could "bring the size of the 2016 harvest only slightly above the 2015 record". Acreage forecasts Another potential spur to prices could come from the dent to sowings programmes from weak prices, with MetLife forecasting that US plantings "should pull back in 2017 leading to lower excess supplies of major crops". Indeed, the insurer forecast US corn sowings falling some 3.5m acres next year, after rising to 94.5m acres in 2016 on USDA estimates. The MetLife estimate is in fact a little more sanguine on corn area than figures from some other forecasters, with Informa pegging US corn seedings next year at 90.8m acres, and the USDA itself putting sowings at 90.0m acres in outline data released two weeks ago. However, on soybeans, MetLife's estimate that "acres are likely to remain flat", after reaching a record 83.7m acres this year, was well below expectations from these observers. Informa pegs US soybean area next year at 88.6m acres, while the USDA has put it at 85.5m acres. 'Turning point' MetLife added that "an acreage pullback is unlikely to be an isolated US event. "Other major crop producing countries... are also likely to pull back on planted acres." The outcome could be that after "four successive years of supply increases, next year could prove to be the turning point with a global supply pullback leading to improved pricing". The group forecast that "grain and oilseed [prices] will start to recover in 2017." Cattle, milk price outlooks However, MetLife was less sanguine on cattle prices, flagging the boost to herd numbers helped by "drastically improved" weather since 2014, which has boosted pasture condition, besides weakness in values of feed grains. "The national beef cow herd has grown 5% since 2014 and is forecast to rise 8.3% and reach a peak of 31.5m head by 2018. "The current consensus is that cattle prices will enter a cyclical low through 2020." The insurer, which last month issued downbeat forecasts for US farmland values, was cautious on prospects for US milk prices too, citing weight from resilient output in the country, which relies more on grains for feeding cattle than competitors such as New Zealand and the European Union. "Milk production in the US will continue to increase as low feed prices encourage dairy farmers to increase output. "This suggests the US will regain market share in export markets, but without significant price increases in 2017." Tweet |
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