Investing.com | Sep 11, 2018 03:08AM ET
Rough Rice Futures are on a cusp of a rally that could return the market to June highs of above $12 per hundred pounds (cwt), technical and fundamental readings show.
But the US Department of Agriculture says American prices for the grain are too high and need discounting to capture the larger export market share the USDA aspires for the marketing year 2018/19.
Can both be achieved?
Yes, say rice analysts and traders, who add that the two are quite distinct targets.
“One is the futures price, which is the price US farmers get for their rice,” said Shawn Hackett of Boca Raton, Florida-based agricultural markets consultancy Hackett Financial Advisors. “The other is the price that US rice is sold to the world at.”
h3 Rough Year Thus Far For Rice Futures/h3It has been a rough year for US rice futures, beset with volatility since they hit a near 7 percent gain in January.
In Monday’s trade, the most active November rice contract on the Chicago Mercantile Exchange settled at $10.92 per cwt. While that puts it up nearly 1 percent for this month, it’s only a modest recovery from a 9 percent drop in August. If the market retains its upward trek, it would be its third month of gains in four. Yet for the year, it is down almost 6 percent. Hackett said:
“But all these might be changing as we see sizeable buy-signals in rice right now as we approach harvest season...We traded consistently in the $12.00-$12.50 (cwt) range in the first half of the year. That’s certainly a target to revisit. It would also be typical for a post-harvest rally.”
Jack Scoville, lead grains trader for Price Futures Group in Chicago, said he expects the market to be restrained for a while before picking up to reach between $11.50 and $11.75 cwt.
h3 “Strong Buy” Call On Technicals/h3“There seems to be very good crop in Texas and Louisiana, and we’re starting to expand in places like Arkansas too. I think that’s going to keep the market under a little bit of a pressure here over the next two to three weeks, before a breakout can happen.”
Backing the prognosis for higher futures prices is Investing.com’s daily technical outlook, which has an immediate “Strong Buy” on US rough rice. The recommendation shifts to a sell only when the November contract reaches between the 50-day moving average of $11.262 and 200-day average of $11.993.
Technicals aside, global rice output may be limited next year by the 2019/2020 El Nino weather phenomenon that could bring drought and stress to crops in Asia.
The US-Mexico Free Trade Agreement announced last month could also be shaping as a positive for rice. Hackett added:
“While rice was never really under the threat of Mexican tariffs before that Agreement, the sum effect of the deal is that it’s become a fundamental boost for all grains traded between the two countries...And that includes rice.”
Nathan Childs, senior rice economist at the USDA Economic Research Service, was quoted telling Riceland Foods , the world's largest miller and marketer of rice that buys the bulk of the grain from American farmers before processing it for shipment. “The relative export price to farm has to contract on Riceland’s end if we are to achieve the shipment potential desired by the USDA.”
Mark Holt, a rice export division official at Riceland, did not immediately respond to Investing.com’s request for comment.
Scoville argued however that US rice was “pretty fairly priced for its quality”:
Get The News You WantRead market moving news with a personalized feed of stocks you care about.Get The App“It’s normal for both futures and export prices to come down this time of year because of harvest...But I don’t think we have to stay there to attract business. I think even at these current prices, we’ve been doing business and I think we’ll continue to do that.”
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