Prairie CWRS wheat bids holding steady

Cash bids and basis levels for Canadian Western Spring Wheat (CWRS) wheat in Western Canada were holding steady during the week ended October 21. On October 21, average spot bids for 13.5% CWRS across Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta came in at around $229 per tonne, or $6.25 per bushel, based on pricing available from a

Prairie CWRS wheat bids holding steady

Cash bids and basis levels for Canadian Western Spring Wheat (CWRS) wheat in Western Canada were holding steady during the week ended October 21. On October 21, average spot bids for 13.5% CWRS across Manitoba, Saskatchewan, and Alberta came in at around $229 per tonne, or $6.25 per bushel, based on pricing available from a cross-section


Prairie winter wheat crop off to good start

Winter wheat crops seeded in Western Canada this fall are off to a good start so far thanks to some rains seen in September and early October. “We’ve had some timely rainfall in September and some fairly mild conditions, which have helped with the establishment of the crop,” said Bruce Burnett, crop and weather specialist

Prairie durum prices to weaken further

Prices for durum wheat in Western Canada have weakened recently and are expected to continue to move lower going forward. Much of the recent price weakness is linked to the supply-and-demand situation, as Canada is expected to produce a very large crop this year, said Neil Townsend, director of market research with CWB in Winnipeg.


Neutral tone expected in canola futures near-term

Canola futures on the ICE Futures Canada trading platform were stronger during the week ended Wednesday (Oct. 9), finding some spillover support from the gains seen in outside oilseed markets. Technical based buying also underpinned values, with canola futures seeming to find good support in the C$475-$480 per tonne level. Steady commercial demand and weakness

Prairie wheat bids strengthen, basis levels widen

Cash bids for spring wheat in Western Canada were stronger following the U.S. futures markets during the week ended Monday (Oct. 7). Gains, however, were capped by widening basis levels and by Friday’s Statistics Canada report which estimated the 2013-14 Canadian wheat crop will be the largest ever at 33.03 million tonnes. Average spot bids


Rain delaying harvest in Alberta

Wet, rainy weather seen in growing regions across Alberta has stalled the harvest in some areas during the first week of October. Harry Brook, a crop specialist with Alberta’s provincial Ag-Info Centre at Stettler, said farmers are now waiting for drier weather to finish up the last bit of the harvest. About 80 to 85

Prairie wheat bids up as U.S. futures rally

Cash bids for spring wheat in Western Canada were sharply higher, following a rally seen in U.S. futures markets. However, the gains were capped by harvest pressure, good yield reports and large supply expectations. Average spot bids for Canada Western red spring (CWRS) wheat (13.5 per cent protein) on Monday across Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta