MarketsFarm — Tight barley supplies in Western Canada continue to keep the feed market underpinned, with gains in the U.S. corn market also providing support to grain markets in general.
“We’re starting to see a bit of an early weather market in the U.S.,” Allen Pirness of Market Place Commodities in Lethbridge said.
Rising corn prices were keeping U.S. corn from entering the Canadian market to any large extent, he said, with barley and wheat accounting for the bulk of the rations locally.
Read Also

Crop tour finds strong corn, soy potential along with diseases in Illinois, western Iowa
Corn yield potential and soybean prospects are significantly above average across Illinois and western Iowa, though plant diseases could threaten final yields, scouts on an annual crop tour of the Midwest said on Wednesday.
The barley supply situation is getting tighter and tighter, which Pirness expected would keep the market supported for the balance of the crop year.
As the tight old-crop situation is unlikely to improve, the market is hopeful for a large barley crop in 2021 to replenish supplies.
“If we get any kind of weather market here, it will affect the new crop,” Pirness said.
A weather scare could also cause farmers to slow sales of any remaining old-crop grain in anticipation of even higher prices, he added.
— Phil Franz-Warkentin reports for MarketsFarm from Winnipeg.