ICE Canola Down With Stronger Canadian Dollar

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: April 30, 2013

By Terryn Shiells, Commodity News Service Canada

April 30, 2013

WINNIPEG – Canola contracts on the ICE Futures Canada platform were mostly weaker Tuesday morning, undermined by the upswing in the value of the Canadian dollar. The stronger currency makes canola less attractive to foreign buyers.

Ideas that canola is overpriced compared to other oilseeds added to the bearish tone, as did positioning ahead of Friday’s stocks report from Statistics Canada.

Canola was also pressured by worries that China’s demand for meal will be reduced because the country is having trouble containing their recent bird flu outbreak.

Read Also

North American Grain/Oilseed Review: Positives for canola, CBOT

Glacier FarmMedia -– Canola futures on the Intercontinental Exchange increased on Monday, reversing course from earlier losses.      Chicago soyoil…

Talk that wet weather in the US will result in more soybean acres planted this spring undermined all oilseeds, including canola.

However, spill over from the advances seen in the Chicago soybean complex limited the declines, as did continued concerns about delayed planting in western Canada.

Slow farmer selling and the tight Canadian canola supply situation kept a firm floor under the market.

As of 8:40 CDT, about 1,980 canola contracts had traded.

Milling wheat, barley and durum were untraded and unchanged Tuesday morning.

Prices in Canadian dollars per metric ton at 8:40 CDT:

About the author

GFM Network News

GFM Network News

Glacier FarmMedia Feed

Glacier FarmMedia, a division of Glacier Media, is Canada's largest publisher of agricultural news in print and online.

explore

Stories from our other publications