Corn futures surged above $7 a bushel for the first time in more than eight years as lack of rainfall in Brazil added to supply concerns.
Corn climbed as much as 3.6 percent to $7.04 a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade, the highest since March 2013. The futures for July delivery pared gains to close the day with a 2.5- percent advance at $6.9675. Soybeans and wheat also rose.
The rally across grain markets prompted major crop trader Bunge Ltd. on Tuesday to raise its earnings outlook for 2021 by as much as 25 percent above its previous forecast. The St. Louis-based company, which posted first-quarter earnings that were double analyst projections, is betting on strong demand for crops as the world emerges from the pandemic, China scoops up American supplies and the renewable diesel industry expands.
China has been buying massive amounts of American soybeans and corn to rebuild the world’s largest hog herd. That’s helping lift prices just as dry weather hits crop yields in South America and Europe. The tailwinds have also lifted Bunge’s rival Archer-Daniels-Midland Co., which last week reported its best-ever earnings for its traditional crop-trading business.
Bunge Chief Executive Officer Greg Heckman said that even with the surge in prices, he’s seeing “no demand destruction” right now, with livestock operators showing profitability and willing to pay the higher prices.
“We are optimistic that the favorable demand environment in the first quarter will continue through 2021,” Heckman said Tuesday.
Dryness is hampering Brazil’s key second crop corn, and rain in the coming week will fail to reach some key growing areas, according to Somar. That could further hurt yields, and analysts including Safras and StoneX Brazil have cut estimates for the coming harvest. A production shortfall there would compound stretched global grain supplies and risk further stoking food inflation.
‘Critical’ situation
“The situation is critical in Brazil,” Paris-based adviser Agritel said in a report. “This should further strain the global balance sheet, while the US will have to partly compensate for the drop in South American exports.”
Corn futures in Brazil rose to a record high this week on Sao Paulo’s B3. The most-active contract headed for a third straight gain on Tuesday as weather conditions deteriorate in key areas of the second corn crop. The futures have jumped 140 percent in 12 months on the B3.
There are signs of better conditions in other major shippers, which could help cool the market. US farmers are planting corn at the fastest pace in years, with sowing almost halfway complete, government data show. Early signs also point to a record-large crop in Ukraine, consultant SovEcon estimates.
In Brazil, demand for animal feed may grow less than expected this year as producers of eggs, milk, chickens and hogs have cut use of feed due to higher corn costs, according to Ariovaldo Zani, president of Brazilian animal feed-industry group Sindiracoes.
We’ve noticed “feed demand falling from a year ago probably because animal production has been also reduced,” Zani said in an interview. Brazil’s feed industry was expecting growth of 4% this year compared with 5 percent in 2020. “We may see this rate going down to 2 percent or 3 percent,” Zani said.