Prairie spring wheat bids mixed

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: October 22, 2025

 Photo: Greg Berg

Glacier FarmMedia— Spring wheat bids in Western Canada were mixed during the week ended Oct. 21, with losses in hard red spring wheat and gains in other classes.

Average Canada Western Red Spring (13.5%) wheat prices were down by C$0.90 to C$2.00 per tonne, according to price quotes from a cross-section of delivery points compiled by PDQ (Price and Data Quotes). Average prices ranged from C$238.30/tonne in southeastern Saskatchewan to as high as C$264.60/tonne in southern Alberta.

Quoted basis levels varied from location to location and ranged from $38.20 to $64.50/tonne above the futures when using the grain company methodology of quoting the basis as the difference between the U.S. dollar denominated futures and the Canadian dollar cash bids.

Read Also

Michael Cordonnier of Soybean and Corn Advisor Inc. said Brazil’s safrinha corn could run into dry conditions given it was planted late. Photo: Zak McLachlan

Pay more attention to South American corn

Brazil’s massive soybean crop may be grabbing the headlines, but there should be more attention on the difficulties with the country’s corn crop, said analyst Michael Cordonnier of Soybean and Corn Advisor Inc.

When accounting for currency exchange rates by adjusting everything into Canadian dollars (C$1=US$0.7132) CWRS basis levels ranged from C$8.10 to C$21.50 below the futures.

Canada Prairie Spring Red (CPSR) wheat bids were higher, up by C$2.60 to C$4.20/tonne, with prices ranging from C$216.80 to C$239.60/tonne.

Durum mixed

Average durum prices were up C$2.20 to down C$0.60/tonne, ranging from C$276.80 to C$293.50/tonne.

MIAX spring wheat futures lost 8.75 cents per bushel in the December contract to settle at US$5.4475/bu. on Oct. 21.

Hard red winter wheat futures were down by 3.50 cents in the December contract on the week at US$4.8500/bu.

The December Chicago soft wheat contract recovered from five-year lows to settle unchanged on the week at US$5.0025/bu.

The Canadian dollar was up by roughly a tenth of a cent relative to its U.S. counterpart, at 71.32 U.S. cents on Oct. 21.

explore

Stories from our other publications