Prairie wheat bids climb alongside U.S. futures

Reading Time: 2 minutes

Published: February 10, 2014

, , ,

CNS Canada –– Western Canadian cash bids for Canada Prairie spring red (CPSR) and Canada Western red spring (CWRS) wheat moved higher, following the sharply stronger U.S. wheat futures markets during the week ending Monday.

Average spot bids for CWRS (13.5 per cent protein) across Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta came in at around $168 per tonne ($4.58 per bushel) based on pricing available from a cross-section of delivery points, up from $158 per tonne ($4.31/bu.) last week. Basis levels widened to an average discount of $70 relative to the futures, compared to $66 last week.

Read Also

FranceAgriMer raised its outlook for soft wheat stocks at the end of 2025/26 to 2.80 million tons from 2.74 million. Photo: Greg Berg

FranceAgriMer cuts non-EU wheat export forecast and raises EU shipments

Farm office FranceAgriMer on Wednesday cut its forecast for French soft wheat exports outside the European Union in 2025/26, to 7.50 million metric tons from 7.60 million expected last month, but still more than double the volume shipped in 2024/25.

Average CPSR values were at $147 per tonne ($4/bu.), up from $138 per tonne ($3.75/bu.) a week ago. Average basis levels widened to a discount of $96 compared to futures, from $92 last week. But there were only a handful of locations offering spot bids. Some elevators were reporting no bids at all for CPSR, while others showed prices for later this spring.

U.S. wheat futures were up sharply amid a short covering rally after a recent drop to fresh contract lows. Strong export demand and a bullish U.S. Department of Agriculture report on Monday were also responsible for the upward price movement.

The March spring wheat contract in Minneapolis, off of which most CWRS contracts in Canada are based, was quoted at US$6.515 per bushel on Monday, up 40.75 cents from the week prior.

Kansas City hard red winter wheat futures, which are now traded in Chicago, are more closely linked to CPSR in Canada. The March Kansas City wheat contract gained 37.5 cents over the week, settling Monday at US$6.6275/bu.

Durum prices were weaker, as slow movement of the large crop out of Western Canada continued to overhang the market. The average price lost $4 during the week, falling to $181 per tonne ($4.92/bu.).

— Terryn Shiells writes for Commodity News Service Canada, a Winnipeg company specializing in grain and commodity market reporting.

explore

Stories from our other publications