
Well, maybe not literally another dust bowl, but the severe drought in the middle of America is wreaking havoc on corn farming and as Trader Dan warns:
More: http://traderdannorcini.blogspot.com/2012/07/smithfield-importing-brazilian-corn.html
QE# could drive a lot of farms in the heart of the country to bankruptcy. Anyone want to invest in Brawndo?
I mentioned in my morning piece today that some of the pressure in the corn market was tied to news that Smithfield, the largest US pork producer, was sourcing corn from Brazil instead of domestically here in the US. That is big news as it indicates how tight current supplies are and how the rise in price is already beginning to do its job of rationing demand.
According to a consultant at Brazil's Safra & Mercado, reported by Dow JOnes which has been all over this story, corn at Brazilian ports is currently fetching $290/ton compared to US corn at the Gulf of Mexico which is closer to $345. It costs anywhere from $30 - $40 ton to ship the grain to the US.
There is no doubt that the meteoric rise in the grains this summer on account of the severe drought is going to impact all of us at the grocery store in the near future. My concern in all this is what might happen should the Fed foolishly choose to go forward with another round of QE. Keep in mind that the rise in the grains has been fundamentally driven. In other words, there are legitimate supply/demand fears pushing the price higher.
If the Fed does indeed begin another round of bond buying in order to prop up the US equity markets, a huge amount of hedge fund speculative money is going to flow directly into the commodity sector in a very crude fashion. Think of it as a shotgun instead of a sniper's rifle. They will blast everything in sight higher.
In the grains this will have the immediate effect of pushing prices even higher further exacerbating the impact of the drought. The problem will occur because the money flows can be so huge that even deep-pocketed commercial sellers will have difficulty standing in front of such a torrent of buying. I shudder to think what might happen if their computers drive the price of corn to $9.00!
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More: http://traderdannorcini.blogspot.com/2012/07/smithfield-importing-brazilian-corn.html
QE# could drive a lot of farms in the heart of the country to bankruptcy. Anyone want to invest in Brawndo?