Local Spotlight

Your Reading List

Wheat drops as Russian production climbs

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: September 29, 2022

,

Reuters – An expected increase in Russia’s wheat crop that will compete with U.S. exports, already hampered by a strong U.S. dollar, is causing Chicago wheat futures to fall, according to traders.

Russian consultancy IKAR raised its forecast of Russia’s 2022 wheat crop by two million tonnes, noting the world’s largest wheat exporter will have 47.5 million tonnes available for shipment in the 2022-23 marketing year.

“We’re seeing bigger and bigger production out of Russia,” said Ed Duggan, senior risk management specialist at Top Third Ag Marketing. “What’s going to make our commodities attractive on a world market? Not with a high dollar.”

Read Also

Usable until Feb. 15, 2026. 
The Port of Churchill in Churchill, Man. is shown on Wednesday, July 4, 2018. Photo:: John Woods/The Canadian Press via ZUMA Press/Reuters

Air, land and sea join forces as Manitoba launches Arctic trade corridor plans

Manitoba wants to take its Arctic trade routes to the big leagues. The Port of Churchill, CentrePort Canada and Winnipeg airport have all raised their hands to help it happen.

Equities and crude oil fell, while the dollar firmed ahead of central bank meetings in the United States and elsewhere that could see borrowing costs rise globally. Continued Ukrainian grain export shipments into world markets also weighed on the market.

Some 165 ships with 3.7 million tonnes of agricultural products have left Ukraine in a safe shipping channel. Another ship chartered by the United Nations World Food Programme left Ukraine with around 30,000 tonnes of wheat for Ethiopia.

explore

Stories from our other publications