There’s Still Time To Get Behind The Corn Rally - But Buyer, Beware

 | May 30, 2019 03:28AM ET

Corn prices are at three-year highs from delayed plantings. The market is poised for its biggest monthly gain since 2012. And there’s a good chance you can still profit if you had missed the rally so far.

That’s all the good news.

Now, for the not-so-good news: Corn prices could see extreme swings in the coming days, weeks and months from weather changes.

So, if you’re planning to get your feet wet in this market, beware.

h3 Volatility Is 'Sky High', Warns Seery Futures/h3

That’s the caution from Mike Seery, a specialist in commodity futures technicals at Plainfield, Illinois, who wrote in a report on Wednesday that volatility in corn

“is sky-high at the present time, all due to the fact of terrible weather conditions in the Midwestern part of the United States.”

The founder of Plainfield-based Seery Futures said Wednesday’s 25-cent swing in corn futures—where the front-month July contract on the Chicago Board of Trade went from a peak of $4.38 per bushel to a low of $4.13—was unusually wide by the market’s standards.

Said Seery:

“I am in the state of Illinois which rains every single day and we have heavy rain in the forecast over the next several days as there is no planting taking place in the area that I reside.”

h3 Only 58% Of Crop Planted, Against The 90% Average/h3

“I do not believe we will plant 100% of the corn crop in 2019. The volatility in corn will certainly remain extremely high over the next several months as we are at a critical juncture for corn planting, as I still believe there will be more acres shifted into soybeans. Soybean planting is only at 29%, behind schedule as well, as we have a real problem across the board.”

Crop progress reports issued on Tuesday by the U.S. Department of Agriculture shows corn farmers having only planted only 58% of the crop, experiencing the slowest pace on record that is well behind the 90% average. Crop emergence, meanwhile, is at only at 32% of the normal pace of 69%.

The resultant squeeze on this season’s corn harvest could be a constraint to industries that depend on the grain, including the packers of livestock feed and those that manufacture starch, sweeteners, corn oil and beverage, as well as the distillers of industrial alcohol and fuel ethanol.