ICE weekly outlook: Canola makes huge move

Prairies' dry patches add to upswing

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Published: July 6, 2023

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ICE November 2023 canola with 20-, 50- and 100-day moving averages. (Barchart)

MarketsFarm — Canola came out of Canada Day continuing to build on gains made going into the holiday, largely due to spillover from the Chicago soy complex.

The U.S. Department of Agriculture last Friday released its planted acres report, which saw soybeans lose four million acres from the 87.5 million planted in 2022, leading to a bullish reaction on the Chicago Board of Trade.

David Derwin, commodity futures advisor for PI Financial in Winnipeg, said patches of dry conditions on the Canadian Prairies added to a sharp upswing in canola values.

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“But people are saying things look really good,” he cautioned, noting much of the region needs good rains.

“Anything is possible when you got a weather-driven environment,” he added.

He pointed to the major resistance of $760-$770 per tonne in ICE Futures’ new-crop November contract, which in winter had been canola’s support level.

“Historically these weather-driven spikes… often start to roll over coming into the end of June and the beginning of July. We were at $610 and we’re at $760, so that’s a big move in just over a month,” Derwin said.

“This certainly gives an opportunity for people who haven’t done much on the marketing side to look at some options at these levels, to put a floor in some really excellent prices.”

— Glen Hallick reports for MarketsFarm from Winnipeg.

About the author

Glen Hallick

Glen Hallick

Reporter

Glen Hallick grew up in rural Manitoba near Starbuck, where his family farmed. Glen has a degree in political studies from the University of Manitoba and studied creative communications at Red River College. Before joining Glacier FarmMedia, Glen was an award-winning reporter and editor with several community newspapers and group editor for the Interlake Publishing Group. Glen is an avid history buff and enjoys following politics.

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