
WHEAT PROFIT OPPORTUNITY
by George
Kleinman
Editor, Commodities
Trends
June 13, 2006
Just
as the days of cheap gasoline are behind us, the days of cheap food are
numbered as well.
Today�s report focuses on an upcoming opportunity in the wheat futures
market. I can see a window of potentially lower wheat prices in the next
couple weeks, and my prediction is this window will open up to a
dramatic profit opportunity.
Let�s start with some background.
Not all wheat is created equal. There are four major wheat varieties
grown in the US, the world�s largest wheat exporter: hard red winter
wheat (used primarily for bread), soft red winter wheat (cakes and
pastries), hard spring wheat (breads and hard rolls) and white wheat
(pita bread, primarily an export variety).
The winter wheat crop is currently being harvested. This harvest will
continue during the coming four to six weeks. The largest (by volume)
futures market, based in Chicago, is for soft winter wheat. This
year�s soft winter wheat crop was very good. The spring wheat futures
market, based in Minneapolis, is a smaller crop than the winter; it�s
currently in the ground and will be harvested during late summer.
The hard winter wheat crop--the most important class for domestic use
and exports--was poor this year. The futures market for hard winter
wheat is based in Kansas City, Mo., and this is the market I�m
targeting for a substantial price rise beginning in early July and
running through year�s end. Here�s why.
Kansas wheat is primarily grown in Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas. Last
Friday, the Dept of Agriculture released a crop report that confirmed
what most of us in the trade already knew: Due to bone-dry growing
conditions in the Great Plains this spring, the hard winter wheat crop
was a disaster--the second-smallest yield in 30 years. Texas and
Oklahoma combined will produce their smallest wheat crop in 50 years.
And wheat production on a global basis is slated to fall sharply in the
coming 12 months.
One would think that with the release of such bullish statistics the
wheat market would have traded sharply higher on Friday. It opened
nicely higher but closed sharply lower (although the majority of the
loss was in the Chicago market, where the more plentiful soft wheat
variety trades).
Why lower? This is typical during harvest. There�s generally more
wheat available to the marketplace during harvest than at any other time
of the year.
Those of you who�ve read my book Trading
Commodities & Financial Futures are familiar with the
�Voice from the Tomb,� passed-down wisdom regarding the seasonality
of the wheat market.
The Voice from the Tomb tells us the optimal time to buy wheat is in
early July. This date approximates a 50 percent completion of the
national winter wheat harvest. The futures market anticipates the end of
the harvest selling pressure by bottoming prior to the completion of the
harvest. Clients who participate in my Voice of the Tomb trading program
know the exact date in July when we�ll be buying wheat, as well as the
profit and loss parameters. I also plan to flash a buy signal to Futures
Market Forecaster subscribers for the December Kansas
City wheat futures when the optimal time to do this is at hand.
Monthly Kansas City Wheat Futures
1993-2006

Commodity.com
Longer term, I look for Kansas City wheat futures to move quite a bit
higher. I wouldn�t rule out a spike similar to the one in 1996--also a
small-crop year--on the monthly chart above. There are limited
alternatives for this variety, and food prices are somewhat inelastic.
Unlike many consumer goods, bread consumption doesn�t decrease if
wheat prices rise by 10 percent or 20 percent.
The weaker wheat price window is open and could remain so, perhaps for a
few additional weeks. But I look for it to close--and create a profit
opportunity.
George Kleinman is editor of Commodities Trends.
© 2006 George Kleinman
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