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SOYBEANS | CORN
| WHEAT |
Risk Premiums and the
“Three Destructions” of Crops

The grain markets follow a fixed
cycle of production, flowing from planting to harvesting at specific times
of the year. The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration and the
United States Department of Agriculture (NOAA/USDA) Joint Agricultural
Weather Facility refer to these stages as moisture and temperature sensitive
stages of development. During these stages of development, the crop is
vulnerable to damage from the forces of nature.
During planting, too much rain fall
can make field work difficult to impossible. Late plantings can result in
loss of acreage or late development which can result in a lower quality crop
or lower yields. Too little rain can prevent seeds from proper germination,
resulting in loss of production as well.
During pollination, or the
reproductive stage of crop development, excessive heat and a lack of
precipitation result in poor pollination and lower pollination. Extremely
low temperatures and/or excessive rainfall can hamper pollination as well,
resulting in crop loss.
During the later stages of
maturation and/or harvest, excessive heat can cause crop damage. Prolonged
exposure to moisture can reduce quality, allow mold-based diseases to
spread, as well as delay the harvesting effort due to the ground being to
muddy for fieldwork. Early frosts can damage crops as well.
Because grains are produced annually
(once a year, in most cases), supply is replenished only once a year. Grain
usage, though it ebbs and flows, is spread out throughout the year. Thus,
yearly production must be rationed. The rationing mechanism is
PRICE.
Price is a function of not only
current supply but perceptions of future supply as well. When current
supply is plentiful and/or future supply appears abundant, grain prices tend
to decrease as consumers become less anxious to secure supply at today’s
prices and producers market their crops more aggressively to secure today’s
pricing before prices erode more. When supply is relatively scarce
and/or future supply looks uncertain, consumers tend to be more aggressive
in pursuing available supply and producers less ready to part with
production, which results in rising prices.
The amount of change in price due to
future supply perceptions is known as the RISK
PREMIUM. When future supply is perceived to be tight or
limited, the futures markets tend to “build a risk premium” into prices,
with prices tending to be higher than one would expect based on current
supply and usage patterns. As future supply perceptions become more secure,
the futures markets tend to “remove the risk premium” from prices, resulting
in pricing closer to the lower level that reflects supply and usage
patterns. Hence, the futures markets tend to reflect the marketplace’s
perception of future supply by increasing or decreasing the risk premium
factored into prices based upon how secure it feels future supply is.
Because crops are most vulnerable to
damage at Planting, Pollination (reproduction), and Harvest, futures prices
tend to reflect this by increasing in prices to compensate for the
uncertainty surrounding future supply. Because markets are emotional,
driven by the forces of fear and greed, prices can reflect irrational
expectations about the future… essentially destroying the crops in the pits
of Chicago based on these emotions during the three critical stages of
development.
We have coined the term
The Three Destructions of Grain Crops
as a description of the “irrational exuberance” – to quote Federal
Reserve Chairman Greenspan- which occurs in the building and removing of
risk premiums. Understanding the relative risk associated with a crop
during certain stages of development can be a useful guide in understanding
grain pricing. The size and extent of risk premium varies greatly from year
to year, based on current and perceived supply and usage patterns. Though
there is no guarantee that this pattern will continue in the future, it has
served as a guideline in the past.
Spring
Planted Crops
Corn and Soybeans are planted in the
spring. Corn planting in the United States typically begins in late March
and is completed by mid to late May. During March and April, possibly in
response to planting worries, Corn futures have gained a total of 100 ¾
cents in the last 19 years – see table at right. Soybean field
preparation and planting typically lasts from mid March through May. During
the early stages of the planting effort (March & April) soybean futures have
gained a total of 357 cents in the last 19 years - see table below.
Total Gain (Loss) in the Last 19 Years
(in cents per bushel)
|
|
Corn |
Soybeans |
|
Jan
|
54 ¾ |
-87 ½ |
|
Feb |
-10 ½ |
-111 |
|
Mar |
105 ¼ |
256 ¾
|
|
Apr |
-4 ½
|
100 ¼
|
|
May |
-21 |
-24 ¾ |
|
Jun |
4 |
-29 ½ |
|
Jul |
-316 ½ |
-422 ½ |
|
Aug |
-38 ¾ |
116 |
|
Sep |
-73 ¾ |
-248 ¾ |
|
Oct |
5 ¼
|
-82 ½ |
|
Nov |
-38 |
88 ¼
|
|
Dec |
-19 ½ |
-106 ¼ |
Past Performance is not necessarily indicative of future
results.
The Corn crop typically pollinates
in late June and early July. During the month of June Corn futures have
gained a total of 4 cents in the last 19 years. During August, Soybeans
begin to set pods or reproduce. In the last 19 years, August has seen
Soybean Futures gain a total of 116 cents. Though reproduction is a very
weather- sensitive time, even a poor pollination ensures some future
production so the market tends to factor in a smaller risk premium than at
planting.
Harvest delays, or at least the fear
of such, tend to grip the market most years. Corn is typically harvested in
October and November, which in the last 19 years has seen prices decline a
total of –32 ¾ cents. Do note that harvest concerns, like other market
worries, tend to happen before the fact when uncertainty is greater.
Soybeans are typically harvested in October and November, which combined
have seen Soybean prices increase a total of 5 ¾ cents in the last 19 years.
Three Destructions Vs Rest of Year
(total gain(loss) in cents during past 19 years)
|
|
Corn |
Soybeans |
|
Planting |
100 ¾ |
357 |
|
Pollination |
4 |
116 |
|
Harvest |
-32 ¾ |
5 ¾ |
|
|
|
|
|
3-Destructions |
72 |
333 ¼ |
|
Rest of Year |
-463 ¼ |
-1030 ¼ |
Past Performance is not necessarily indicative of future
results.
Notes: the
tables above uses futures data provided by Gecko Software from 1981 to
2000, or the most current 19 years. The following futures contracts were
used for each month: Jan-Feb (CK,SK), Mar-May (CN,SN), Jun-Jul (CU,SX),
Aug-Sep (CZ,SX), Oct (CZ,SF), Nov (CH,SF), Dec (CH,SH)
The most telling evidence that the
futures market builds a risk premium into prices during the Three
Destructions (planting, pollination, and harvest) can be seen in the table
above entitled, Three Destructions Vs. Rest of Year.
Though one can’t say for sure that these tendencies will continue in the
future – given changes in farming –but historically the grain markets have
experienced the bulk of there gains during times of the year when the crop
is susceptible to damage.
Winter
Planted Crops
Winter Wheat is aptly named because
it is planted in the fall and harvested in the summer. Winter Wheat tends
to exhibit the same type of behavior of building and removing risk premiums
as Corn and Soybeans, though the times of the year are different and the
reaction to threats is different.
Total Gain (Loss) in Last 19 Years
(in cents per bushel)
|
|
Wheat |
|
Jan |
13 3/4 |
|
Feb |
-137 1/2 |
|
Mar |
73 |
|
Apr |
104 |
|
May |
-195 3/4 |
|
Jun |
-61 3/4 |
|
Jul |
-160 |
|
Aug |
42 1/4 |
|
Sep |
-12 3/4 |
|
Oct |
24 3/4 |
|
Nov |
-28 |
|
Dec |
-23 1/2 |
Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future
results.
Winter Wheat is typically planted in
September and October. During planting in the last 19 years Wheat futures
have gained a total of 24 ¾ cents. After planting winter wheat goes into
dormancy from November through to March.
Emerging after the dormancy, Wheat
is susceptible to a lack of rain, late frosts, and a host of other
problems. This reproductive rally, during heading, is the largest of the
three destructions, seeing wheat futures gain a total of 177 cents in the
past 19 years.
Harvest for wheat is typically a non
event. Because wheat can sit in the fields for a long time maturing, as
long as it remains dry, harvest damage is typically extremely rare. With
harvest typically beginning in July and August, farmers typically have
plenty of time to harvest their crops.
3- Destructions Vs Rest of Year
(Total gain (loss) in cents during past 19 years)
|
|
Wheat |
|
Planting |
24 ¾ |
|
Emerging |
177 |
|
Harvest |
-117 ¾ |
|
|
|
|
Three Destructions
|
84 |
|
Rest of Year |
-432 ½ |
Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future
results.
Notes: the tables
above uses futures data provided by GeckoSoftware from 1981 to 2000, or
the most current 19 years. The following futures contracts were used for
each month: Jan-Feb (CK,SK), Mar-May (CN,SN), Jun-Jul (CU,SX), Aug-Sep (CZ,SX),
Oct (CZ,SF), Nov (CH,SF), Dec (CH,SH).
Like its spring planted brethren,
Winter Wheat tends to gain the most when the crop is susceptible to damage
and future supply is uncertain. In the last 19 years, Winter Wheat futures
have gained a total of 84 cents during the Three Destructions while the rest
of the year has seen prices decline by a total of –432 ½ cents.
Conclusions
Understanding the presence of risk
premiums can be beneficial for both speculators, as well as hedgers. The
size and extent of risk premiums varies greatly from year to year. However,
understanding that this pattern may repeat can definitely help speculators
and hedgers position themselves accordingly.
Risk premiums tend to be the largest
when current supplies are tight as well, and in years when current supply is
abundant it appears that risk premiums aren’t even present. Like any study,
keep the concept in mind when using grain futures, but do not expect the
past to repeat itself exactly. After all, one can’t drive forward looking
only in the rear view mirror. |