australian wheat update

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    Australian Wheat Update
    SYDNEY, Aug 28 (Reuters) - Uncertainty over Australia's grain harvest in the
    face of another prolonged dry spell has triggered a surge in grain futures
    prices and record trading volumes, as traders price in the risk the country
    will need to import. Australian milling wheat futures prices have risen to a
    premium of A$35-A$40 a tonne over Chicago wheat futures. That translates to
    about 70 US cents a bushel, or 18 percent, above Chicago wheat futures prices
    of around $4 a bushel, traders said. "The Australian crop is on a knife-edge
    as far as the season goes," Dougal Hunter, market development executive for
    Australian Stock Exchange (ASX) grain futures, said on Monday, while
    announcing record trading volumes on Friday. Around 4,700 futures and options
    contracts were traded, with the equivalent of 94,340 tonnes of business
    transacted, including around 1,300 feed barley futures and 1,800 milling
    wheat futures. Milling wheat futures prices rose by A$6 ($5) a tonne to up to
    A$231 during Friday trade, before closing at A$228, while feed barley futures
    prices rose by A$11 to A$214. The possibility of grains imports is looming
    once again, in what would be a major blow for an industry which is normally
    the second-biggest wheat exporter in the world after the United States.
    Australia's first significant grain imports since colonial times took place
    in 2003 when the country's worst drought in 100 years sent feed wheat prices
    rocketing by A$180 a tonne in six months to as high as A$370 a tonne. They
    subsequently took a tumble when almost 500,000 tonnes of imported feed grain
    finally began to arrive, from Britain, Canada and the United States.
    Australian grains futures markets have again entered an extremely volatile
    zone as the country battles with a five-year on-again-off-again drought which
    has produced erratic wheat crops between a decimated 10 million tonnes in
    2002/03 and a record 26 million tonnes in 2003/04. This has pushed Australian
    milling wheat futures prices up by by about 6 percent, orby A$13 a tonne,
    since the beginning of August, while feed barley prices have risen by about
    16 percent, or by about A$29 a tonne. Brett Cooper, senior broker with Man
    Financial Australia, said Australian wheat futures had risen by the
    equivalent of about 55 US cents a bushel in the last three to four weeks
    relative to Chicago December futures because of crop uncertainty. There was
    further "definite" upside on Australian grain futures prices, Cooper said.
    "It's a moving target," he said.
 
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