${log.root}/lowem.log
Inflation, Investing and Everything


All | Musings | Tech | Java | Biz | Energy | Env

AddThis Feed Button
20080610 Tuesday June 10, 2008

Chicago CBOT corn price hits record $7.20 per bushel, wheat and soy up

news.yahoo.com :

Chicago corn futures rose to an all-time high on Monday [9 Jun 2008] on crude oil's surge to a record high above $139. Corn and soybean prices were also boosted by worries about young U.S. crops, due to torrential rains in the country's heartland. The lead July 2008 corn futures contract rose as high as $6.72 per bushel, a record for a spot contract. The new-crop July 2009 corn contract scaled an all-time peak of $7.20 per bushel. Worries about tight fundamentals, such as low stocks and high demand, was likely to continue feeding the rally in corn, market participants said.

Other grain and oilseed futures were also expected to remain strong. The July 2008 wheat futures contract climbed as high as $8.38 per bushel. The July 2008 soybean futures contract rose as high as $14.87 per bushel, up about 2% compared with Friday's close of $14.57. U.S. rough rice, which initially bucked the trend and dipped, recouped earlier losses. July rice rose more than 2% to $20.40 per hundredweight, after it ended on Friday at $19.96.

- Therein lies the beauty of the equally-weighted agricultural commodities ETF, the PowerShares DB Agriculture Fund, listed on AMEX as DBA. With its 25% equal weighting each to wheat, corn, sugar, and soybeans, if one component dips, there is a good chance that the others will compensate for it. For example, while wheat was all the rage just a while ago, corn did not do as well, but now it is corn's turn to do the heavy lifting. There was talk earlier about farmers planning to plant more wheat and less corn due to the record wheat prices - and guess what happens next - we get record corn prices.

Both as an individual investor and fund manager, I do not have any particular preference between one agricultural commodity or another. I look at it from an asset allocation point of view, and DBA fits well into my allocation plan as the pure commodity price play for the agricultural sector. In addition to the pure price play, I have allocated an equal portion to the "agricultural majors" as well - this role is filled by the aptly-named MOO, the Market Vectors Agribusiness ETF which is also listed on AMEX.

See also :

1. As corn price rises, so could food bills
2. Wheat breaches $12 for first time after biggest gain since 2002
3. Bread and inflation
4. Rice price jumps to record high after doubling since 2007
5. Why food costs more

(2008-06-10 09:27:58 SGT) [Biz] Permalink





Most popular blog postings on lowem.log :

1. Singapore SIBOR interest rates fall to 1.5%, lowest since Dec 2004
2. Singapore SIBOR rate falls to 1.31%, lowest since Nov 2004
3. Live spot gold price quotes chart on COMEX
4. Fuel prices seen stoking Malaysia inflation in 2008
5. 2010 Honda Civic Hybrid preliminary specifications released
6. Singapore SIBOR rate fell to 1.25% in Apr 2008, lowest since Aug 2004
7. Malaysia inflation rate jumps to 7.7% in Jun 2008, a 26-year record high
8. Singapore : electricity tariffs to increase April 2008 on rising oil prices

Featured articles on lowem.log :

1. ABC Guide to Beating Inflation in Singapore and Elsewhere
2. Singapore inflation rate hits new 26-year high of 7.5% in Apr 2008
3. Singapore : Bread price inflation continues
4. 2010 Honda Civic Hybrid preliminary specifications released
5. Peakoiler buys 2008 Honda Civic Hybrid FD3
6. How to insert currency exchange rates into Google Spreadsheets
7. Singapore SIBOR rate falls to 0.94% in Nov 2008, lowest since Jul 2004
8. Singapore : Inflation erodes away bank savings





archives
search
sponsored links





bookmarks

about
my profile
contact me

personal
biow
ken
wenn

sites
photo gallery
wiki

blogroll
reviewem
sgenergycrisis
theenergycollective

forums
goldclubasia.com
peakoil.com


navigation
decals

Click for Singapore, Singapore Forecast





rss feed for lowem.log

Get Firefox!

powered by
hosted by