April 4, 2007

 

China corn prices little changed; likely to remain stable
 

 

China's corn prices in major producing regions remained steady in the week to Wednesday, with market sentiment little changed by volatile futures prices, traders said.

 

"Changes in futures prices were basically due to speculative money; on the domestic spot market, market sentiment remained stable as supply and demand were little changed," a trader based in Beijing said.

 

In Jilin, China's largest corn-producing province, prices of average-quality corn were quoted at RMB1,040-1,080/tonne, unchanged from a week earlier.

 

Prices in Heilongjiang province, another major corn producing region in the northeast, were also unchanged at RMB1,000-RMB1,040/tonne.

 

"Processing plants in the north-east are still buying steadily as they need corn," so there aren't any factors to pressure prices sharply higher or lower," said Wang Shiliang, a trader at Jilin Grains Centre.

 

"Despite the swings in the futures market, cash prices will likely remain relatively stable in April," Wang added.

 

The benchmark September corn contract traded on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange settled 2.0 percent lower Monday, after the US Department of Agriculture released a report Friday pegging 2007 corn seedings at 90.454 million acres, sharply higher than the 78.327 million acres in 2006.

 

Meanwhile, the China National Grain and Oils Information Centre, or CNGOIC, Wednesday raised its 2007 forecast for corn acreage to 27.6 million hectares, 200,000 hectares higher than its March estimates, and estimated output is seen to rise by 1 million tonnes to 147 million tonnes.

 

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