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RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 2:06:36 PM   
USSAmerica


Posts: 18715
Joined: 10/28/2002
From: Graham, NC, USA
Status: offline
Good morning - Tithe. 

_____________________________

Mike

"Good times will set you free" - Jimmy Buffett

"They need more rum punch" - Me


Artwork by The Amazing Dixie

(in reply to Apollo11)
Post #: 27571
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 2:06:52 PM   
USSAmerica


Posts: 18715
Joined: 10/28/2002
From: Graham, NC, USA
Status: offline
New page. 

_____________________________

Mike

"Good times will set you free" - Jimmy Buffett

"They need more rum punch" - Me


Artwork by The Amazing Dixie

(in reply to USSAmerica)
Post #: 27572
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 2:07:25 PM   
USSAmerica


Posts: 18715
Joined: 10/28/2002
From: Graham, NC, USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy


quote:

ORIGINAL: Apollo11

Hi all,

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy

Post carnage tithe...

It's gonna be a fine day today.

CV Saratoga, Bomb hits 6, Torpedo hits 4, and is sunk
CV Lexington, Bomb hits 3, Torpedo hits 6, and is sunk
CV Hornet, Bomb hits 9, Torpedo hits 6, and is sunk
CV Enterprise, Bomb hits 10, Torpedo hits 2, heavy fires, heavy damage
BB West Virginia, Torpedo hits 2, heavy damage
CA Portland, Torpedo hits 1, on fire
CA Salt Lake City, Bomb hits 1
CA Louisville, Bomb hits 6, Torpedo hits 1, heavy fires, heavy damage
CL Helena, Bomb hits 1
CL Concord, Bomb hits 4, on fire
DD Blue, Bomb hits 2, heavy fires, heavy damage
DD Mugford, Bomb hits 1, heavy fires, heavy damage
DD Helm, Bomb hits 6, and is sunk
DD Jarvis, Bomb hits 1, Torpedo hits 1, and is sunk
DD Hammann, Bomb hits 2, heavy fires
DD Morris, Bomb hits 3, on fire
DD Mugford, Bomb hits 2, heavy fires, heavy damage
DMS Elliot, Bomb hits 1, heavy fires
DMS Dorsey, Bomb hits 1, on fire
APD Colhoun, Bomb hits 3, heavy fires, heavy damage
AVD Hulbert, Bomb hits 2, heavy fires, heavy damage



Was this and accompanying text posted to AAR?


Leo "Apollo11"


Morning, Leo. Check our 2x2 AAR here (Japanese only, of course):

http://www.matrixgames.com/forums/tm.asp?m=2593643&mpage=5&key=�


Yeah, we're still working up the courage to post an update in our Allied AAR.

_____________________________

Mike

"Good times will set you free" - Jimmy Buffett

"They need more rum punch" - Me


Artwork by The Amazing Dixie

(in reply to Chickenboy)
Post #: 27573
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 2:44:07 PM   
Mike Solli


Posts: 15792
Joined: 10/18/2000
From: the flight deck of the Zuikaku
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Dixie


quote:

ORIGINAL: Mike Solli


quote:

ORIGINAL: BrucePowers

Mike, what are you still doing up?


I'm on terminal leave. You should see the beard I've grown. I spend my days job searching. Another phone interview tomorrow.


How long until you're finally out?


I'm still in on the part-time side. I actually did 15 years part-time Guardsman, 8 years full-time Guardsman and back to part-time. I'll stay in at least till June 2012 (24 yrs). If I get promoted, I'll need to stay in 3 years to retire at that rank. We'll see. There's another mobilization scheduled for 2013 so If I go, it'll be as an LTC. At any rate, right now I collect my retirement at age 59 (a year early because of mobilizations). The 24 year mark is significant because there is legislation in Congress that will allow any reservist to collect retirement 1 year early for every 2 years over 20. That would give me retirement 2 years early. If I get promoted, I'll stay in to age 56 and then collect immediately (assuming the darn thing passes).

_____________________________


Created by the amazing Dixie

(in reply to Dixie)
Post #: 27574
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 2:45:18 PM   
Mike Solli


Posts: 15792
Joined: 10/18/2000
From: the flight deck of the Zuikaku
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Apollo11

Hi all,

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mike Solli

I'm on terminal leave. You should see the beard I've grown. I spend my days job searching. Another phone interview tomorrow.


Any prospects in your field Mike?


Leo "Apollo11"



Yeah, there are prospects, but there are also a lot of people looking too. It'll happen, I just don't know where, what or when. I just keep applying and talking to people. About all I can do...

_____________________________


Created by the amazing Dixie

(in reply to Apollo11)
Post #: 27575
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 4:10:41 PM   
Schanilec

 

Posts: 4040
Joined: 6/12/2010
From: Grand Forks, ND
Status: offline
Keep pounding. Took me eight months.

_____________________________

This is one Czech that doesn't bounce.

(in reply to Mike Solli)
Post #: 27576
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 4:33:55 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline
Hey Jeff,

Why are July 2012 corn futures holding relatively steady whilest Soybean futures have gotten pummeled lately? For animal feed, they're in lockstep, so I can't rationalize this divergence with animal feed precursors to the Chicoms. Lots of questions about Argentina's crop this year in Soy-no guarantees there.

Is this ethanol production that's backstopping the corn futures? I know ~40% of the crop is going for primary ethanol production (and DDGs used in animal feed subsequently), but is that enough to explain the difference?

Seems like Belarus, Ukraine and Russia will have a decent wheat crop this year, neh? What's the skinny on the Canadians, eh? That'll probably deflate some of the wheat action further.

_____________________________


(in reply to Schanilec)
Post #: 27577
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 5:53:01 PM   
witpqs


Posts: 26087
Joined: 10/4/2004
From: Argleton
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy

Hey Jeff,

Why are July 2012 corn futures holding relatively steady whilest Soybean futures have gotten pummeled lately? For animal feed, they're in lockstep, so I can't rationalize this divergence with animal feed precursors to the Chicoms. Lots of questions about Argentina's crop this year in Soy-no guarantees there.

Is this ethanol production that's backstopping the corn futures? I know ~40% of the crop is going for primary ethanol production (and DDGs used in animal feed subsequently), but is that enough to explain the difference?

Seems like Belarus, Ukraine and Russia will have a decent wheat crop this year, neh? What's the skinny on the Canadians, eh? That'll probably deflate some of the wheat action further.


Partly ethanol production but mostly corn/ethanol SUBSIDIES.

(in reply to Chickenboy)
Post #: 27578
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 6:15:02 PM   
JWE

 

Posts: 6580
Joined: 7/19/2005
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
Hey Jeff,

Why are July 2012 corn futures holding relatively steady whilest Soybean futures have gotten pummeled lately? For animal feed, they're in lockstep, so I can't rationalize this divergence with animal feed precursors to the Chicoms. Lots of questions about Argentina's crop this year in Soy-no guarantees there.
Kinda like to know that too. I'm pretty heavily invested in Chile and Argentina.
quote:

Is this ethanol production that's backstopping the corn futures? I know ~40% of the crop is going for primary ethanol production (and DDGs used in animal feed subsequently), but is that enough to explain the difference?
Couple things defining floors for corn; The basic subsidy is huge. The mandate subsidy isn't that big, but it's a second, hard govt mandated, floor. Personally believe corn is way artificially high. If we can put the EPA in the trash where it belongs, corn should go to Canadian or Australian secondaries where it belongs. Just IMHO
quote:

Seems like Belarus, Ukraine and Russia will have a decent wheat crop this year, neh? What's the skinny on the Canadians, eh? That'll probably deflate some of the wheat action further.
Canadians have their wheat together. For a true look at food commodities, just take a peek at the Canadian (or Australian) secondaries. If you understand what you see, you will understand what to do when the fit hits the shan.

[ed] and I gay-rown-tee dem fewmets is gonna be hit de windmill in yo lifetime yankee folks. Jus don be mess wif de crawfish or de anduille..




Attachment (1)

< Message edited by JWE -- 9/29/2011 6:33:24 PM >


_____________________________


(in reply to Chickenboy)
Post #: 27579
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 6:39:24 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs


quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy

Hey Jeff,

Why are July 2012 corn futures holding relatively steady whilest Soybean futures have gotten pummeled lately? For animal feed, they're in lockstep, so I can't rationalize this divergence with animal feed precursors to the Chicoms. Lots of questions about Argentina's crop this year in Soy-no guarantees there.

Is this ethanol production that's backstopping the corn futures? I know ~40% of the crop is going for primary ethanol production (and DDGs used in animal feed subsequently), but is that enough to explain the difference?

Seems like Belarus, Ukraine and Russia will have a decent wheat crop this year, neh? What's the skinny on the Canadians, eh? That'll probably deflate some of the wheat action further.


Partly ethanol production but mostly corn/ethanol SUBSIDIES.

I get the subsidies on the corn, guys-along with ethanol backstopping corn futures. My question is why the differential recoil between July 2012 corn versus July 2012 beans of late.

_____________________________


(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 27580
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 7:05:08 PM   
witpqs


Posts: 26087
Joined: 10/4/2004
From: Argleton
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: JWE

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
Hey Jeff,

Why are July 2012 corn futures holding relatively steady whilest Soybean futures have gotten pummeled lately? For animal feed, they're in lockstep, so I can't rationalize this divergence with animal feed precursors to the Chicoms. Lots of questions about Argentina's crop this year in Soy-no guarantees there.
Kinda like to know that too. I'm pretty heavily invested in Chile and Argentina.
quote:

Is this ethanol production that's backstopping the corn futures? I know ~40% of the crop is going for primary ethanol production (and DDGs used in animal feed subsequently), but is that enough to explain the difference?
Couple things defining floors for corn; The basic subsidy is huge. The mandate subsidy isn't that big, but it's a second, hard govt mandated, floor. Personally believe corn is way artificially high. If we can put the EPA in the trash where it belongs, corn should go to Canadian or Australian secondaries where it belongs. Just IMHO
quote:

Seems like Belarus, Ukraine and Russia will have a decent wheat crop this year, neh? What's the skinny on the Canadians, eh? That'll probably deflate some of the wheat action further.
Canadians have their wheat together. For a true look at food commodities, just take a peek at the Canadian (or Australian) secondaries. If you understand what you see, you will understand what to do when the fit hits the shan.

[ed] and I gay-rown-tee dem fewmets is gonna be hit de windmill in yo lifetime yankee folks. Jus don be mess wif de crawfish or de anduille..





In a recent court filing the EPA said that it wants 230,000 new employees to handle the paperwork processing for the new CO2 emission permits.

(in reply to JWE)
Post #: 27581
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 7:29:34 PM   
Dixie


Posts: 10303
Joined: 3/10/2006
From: UK
Status: offline
Since Thursday I've had e-mails from two contracting agencies, looks like I might have some prospect of employment when I leave my mob.


_____________________________



Bigger boys stole my sig

(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 27582
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 7:31:53 PM   
USSAmerica


Posts: 18715
Joined: 10/28/2002
From: Graham, NC, USA
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs

quote:

ORIGINAL: JWE

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
Hey Jeff,

Why are July 2012 corn futures holding relatively steady whilest Soybean futures have gotten pummeled lately? For animal feed, they're in lockstep, so I can't rationalize this divergence with animal feed precursors to the Chicoms. Lots of questions about Argentina's crop this year in Soy-no guarantees there.
Kinda like to know that too. I'm pretty heavily invested in Chile and Argentina.
quote:

Is this ethanol production that's backstopping the corn futures? I know ~40% of the crop is going for primary ethanol production (and DDGs used in animal feed subsequently), but is that enough to explain the difference?
Couple things defining floors for corn; The basic subsidy is huge. The mandate subsidy isn't that big, but it's a second, hard govt mandated, floor. Personally believe corn is way artificially high. If we can put the EPA in the trash where it belongs, corn should go to Canadian or Australian secondaries where it belongs. Just IMHO
quote:

Seems like Belarus, Ukraine and Russia will have a decent wheat crop this year, neh? What's the skinny on the Canadians, eh? That'll probably deflate some of the wheat action further.
Canadians have their wheat together. For a true look at food commodities, just take a peek at the Canadian (or Australian) secondaries. If you understand what you see, you will understand what to do when the fit hits the shan.

[ed] and I gay-rown-tee dem fewmets is gonna be hit de windmill in yo lifetime yankee folks. Jus don be mess wif de crawfish or de anduille..





In a recent court filing the EPA said that it wants 230,000 new employees to handle the paperwork processing for the new CO2 emission permits.


Jobs creation.

_____________________________

Mike

"Good times will set you free" - Jimmy Buffett

"They need more rum punch" - Me


Artwork by The Amazing Dixie

(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 27583
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 7:50:48 PM   
Mike Solli


Posts: 15792
Joined: 10/18/2000
From: the flight deck of the Zuikaku
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Dixie

Since Thursday I've had e-mails from two contracting agencies, looks like I might have some prospect of employment when I leave my mob.



You getting out, Dixie?

_____________________________


Created by the amazing Dixie

(in reply to Dixie)
Post #: 27584
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 8:14:14 PM   
Dixie


Posts: 10303
Joined: 3/10/2006
From: UK
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mike Solli


quote:

ORIGINAL: Dixie

Since Thursday I've had e-mails from two contracting agencies, looks like I might have some prospect of employment when I leave my mob.



You getting out, Dixie?


I wish I knew!

I've been trying to stay in and I applied a year ago, but flexibility is the key to airpower. And indecision is the key to flexibility... The RAF seem to be moving the goalposts on me a fair bit, I was told in March that my application would be looked at in August, now it's September and I've been told my application is getting looked at in February. I'd say that the prospects of staying in are fairly good, given my last assessment and the fact that other guys on the squadron have been signed on. However, I'm planning my life around getting the boot so if it comes to that I'm ready. Do some resettlement courses and gain some qualifications and the world is my choice of mollusc. If they sign me on then I get to do it all again in three years time.

_____________________________



Bigger boys stole my sig

(in reply to Mike Solli)
Post #: 27585
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 8:15:39 PM   
Mike Solli


Posts: 15792
Joined: 10/18/2000
From: the flight deck of the Zuikaku
Status: offline
Sounds familiar. How many years do you have so far (and how many do you need to retire)?

_____________________________


Created by the amazing Dixie

(in reply to Dixie)
Post #: 27586
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 8:18:55 PM   
JWE

 

Posts: 6580
Joined: 7/19/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
quote:

ORIGINAL: witpqs
quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
Hey Jeff,

Why are July 2012 corn futures holding relatively steady whilest Soybean futures have gotten pummeled lately? For animal feed, they're in lockstep, so I can't rationalize this divergence with animal feed precursors to the Chicoms. Lots of questions about Argentina's crop this year in Soy-no guarantees there.

Is this ethanol production that's backstopping the corn futures? I know ~40% of the crop is going for primary ethanol production (and DDGs used in animal feed subsequently), but is that enough to explain the difference?

Seems like Belarus, Ukraine and Russia will have a decent wheat crop this year, neh? What's the skinny on the Canadians, eh? That'll probably deflate some of the wheat action further.


Partly ethanol production but mostly corn/ethanol SUBSIDIES.

I get the subsidies on the corn, guys-along with ethanol backstopping corn futures. My question is why the differential recoil between July 2012 corn versus July 2012 beans of late.

My friend I laugh because there's probably prolly not too many of us on the forum that even knows what 2012 beans means, much less the recoil on corn. Me, I don't have a hope of doing North American futures, and I agree with all the pros that say the US is seriously toast and not worth a penny investment. Everything I got in agro, is in Chile and Argentina because the are stable.

_____________________________


(in reply to Chickenboy)
Post #: 27587
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 8:23:41 PM   
Dixie


Posts: 10303
Joined: 3/10/2006
From: UK
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Mike Solli

Sounds familiar. How many years do you have so far (and how many do you need to retire)?


I've done 7 1/2 so far. Seeing as I'm still in my 20's retirement is a good few decades off yet! If I complete 12 years then I get a half pension, better than nothing and it'll give me plenty of chance for a second career.

_____________________________



Bigger boys stole my sig

(in reply to Mike Solli)
Post #: 27588
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 8:25:39 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline
JWE,

Jeff is a commodities broker / trader, so my specific comments were directed towards his expertise. Maybe I should have PM'ed him.

Hey-maybe he can also answer why sugar is down 7% on the day (!)

_____________________________


(in reply to JWE)
Post #: 27589
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 8:54:32 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Dixie
Do some resettlement courses and gain some qualifications and the world is my choice of mollusc.

The world is your periwinkle? Cuttlefish? Snail? Doesn't have much of a ring to it, mate.

_____________________________


(in reply to Dixie)
Post #: 27590
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 8:56:42 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: JWE
Everything I got in agro, is in Chile and Argentina because the are stable.

You think inflation in Argentina and their currency stability and Chile's overreliance on the copper commodity trade are stable? Hmmm...permit me to disagree with you, kind sir.

_____________________________


(in reply to JWE)
Post #: 27591
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 8:59:20 PM   
Terminus


Posts: 41459
Joined: 4/23/2005
From: Denmark
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy


quote:

ORIGINAL: Dixie
Do some resettlement courses and gain some qualifications and the world is my choice of mollusc.

The world is your periwinkle? Cuttlefish? Snail? Doesn't have much of a ring to it, mate.


Lamellibranch?

_____________________________

We are all dreams of the Giant Space Butterfly.

(in reply to Chickenboy)
Post #: 27592
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 8:59:31 PM   
Terminus


Posts: 41459
Joined: 4/23/2005
From: Denmark
Status: offline
-7...

_____________________________

We are all dreams of the Giant Space Butterfly.

(in reply to Terminus)
Post #: 27593
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 9:01:24 PM   
JWE

 

Posts: 6580
Joined: 7/19/2005
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
JWE,
Jeff is a commodities broker / trader, so my specific comments were directed towards his expertise. Maybe I should have PM'ed him.

Hey-maybe he can also answer why sugar is down 7% on the day (!)

Hear ya Chickenboy. Life, the universe and everything just sucks, don't it? M'kay, have some fresh rainbow trout I go got from a friend in SoDak. Woof, woof, a serious dinner tonite. Mom's all in a tizzie cause the oven is beeping, and I've got it set up to do a frozen Tuscan Boule, I got from Publix. Darn. Okey doke, fish (goddam good fish too); a really sweet choppoed brocolli thing; a bit of crornbread stuffing thing; a flan. Life really is good. J

_____________________________


(in reply to Chickenboy)
Post #: 27594
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 9:11:00 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: JWE


quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy
JWE,
Jeff is a commodities broker / trader, so my specific comments were directed towards his expertise. Maybe I should have PM'ed him.

Hey-maybe he can also answer why sugar is down 7% on the day (!)

Hear ya Chickenboy. Life, the universe and everything just sucks, don't it? M'kay, have some fresh rainbow trout I go got from a friend in SoDak. Woof, woof, a serious dinner tonite. Mom's all in a tizzie cause the oven is beeping, and I've got it set up to do a frozen Tuscan Boule, I got from Publix. Darn. Okey doke, fish (goddam good fish too); a really sweet choppoed brocolli thing; a bit of crornbread stuffing thing; a flan. Life really is good. J

Naw. Life (and that fish dish you're making) are definitely good. Financial machinations and gyrations notwithstanding. Can't speak for everything or the Universe, of course. Bon appetit', homey.

_____________________________


(in reply to JWE)
Post #: 27595
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 9:25:55 PM   
jeffk3510


Posts: 4132
Joined: 12/3/2007
From: Kansas
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy

Hey Jeff,

Why are July 2012 corn futures holding relatively steady whilest Soybean futures have gotten pummeled lately? For animal feed, they're in lockstep, so I can't rationalize this divergence with animal feed precursors to the Chicoms. Lots of questions about Argentina's crop this year in Soy-no guarantees there.

Is this ethanol production that's backstopping the corn futures? I know ~40% of the crop is going for primary ethanol production (and DDGs used in animal feed subsequently), but is that enough to explain the difference?

Seems like Belarus, Ukraine and Russia will have a decent wheat crop this year, neh? What's the skinny on the Canadians, eh? That'll probably deflate some of the wheat action further.


Ha. Maybe I shouldn't have mentioned I am a broker… so that I don't have to answer questions no one has the answers to...

Your questions about ysb vs corn this year is a mystery in everyone’s book. I've seen reports that the stocks to use ratio on ysb could be NEGATIVE this year... now how the hell that equates to the board being down $2 since September is beyond my knowledge.

The uncertainty in these outside markets has just crushed grain prices as of late. That mixed with harvest pressure. Yes the crop (corn/ysb) will be down substantially going into 2012, but S&D seem to be out of the picture for commodities now a day. They don't seem to have anything to do with it. We're starting to hear of better yields on corn as harvest moves itself north in addition to the outside markets, thus resulting in the funds selling their long positions, taking their profits, and running. However... I don't buy the traders following S&D... as noted above.

One this that is for damn sure is corn vs wheat. If corn is $6.50, wheat won’t be $7.50… one will have to move. Either corn down or wheat up… the market always seems to correct itself. Over what time frame… ehhh

You also are looking at just futures price… the cash price is a totally different animal. I am trading corn a $1 over the board for local cash prices, when historically it is -20c or so….THAT is how poor the crop is in this area and how short the fall crop is. For example.. there is a carry in the corn market futures.. but about a month ago cash corn was actually an inverse out to the Dec11....meaning sport corn was a HOT commodity

Argentina- Beans will be a known commodity come Mayish timeframe and then we will have an idea of direction possibly.

I would say until all of the outside markets and financials pull their head outa their rears, things will be extremely volatile. That mixed with harvest pressure will probably keep things in check. So... in Jan when we're at $10 corn and $15 beans, you can say, damn Jeff, you were wrong as all hell.

I do more commercial brokerage than actual market analysis (charts yadayada)...buy commodity x from coop, sell it to end-user x for x profit. We track local basis (difference between cash and futures price) and just trade that, thus lower our risk SUBSTANTIALLY……..10 to .20 margin depending on how long the hold the position for and how ahead of the game you are. You do that on 10m bushels... my company can make a nice little chunk. This year we won't even come close to those numbers on volume because of the poor crop in both the summer and currently this fall.

One this is for sure.. .we're buying all of the good quality corn and milo we can get our hands on... at any basis level... sitting on it and dumping into the feedlots and ethanol plants in Central Kansas....the margins we're making and are going to make would blow your mind....thats the kind of work I do. Take a position that will work in our favor and move it to x... for x margin.

I also trade local farmers accounts. Soo... Mr. Krehbiel.. what do you think corn will do today... Well, Frank, call me at 1:15 and I will tell you what it DID...

< Message edited by jeffk3510 -- 9/29/2011 9:33:30 PM >


_____________________________

Life is tough. The sooner you realize that, the easier it will be.

Currently chasing three kids around the Midwest.

(in reply to Chickenboy)
Post #: 27596
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 9:39:55 PM   
jeffk3510


Posts: 4132
Joined: 12/3/2007
From: Kansas
Status: offline
On a lighter note.. I am SOOO excited to travel 5 hours after work to go to my cousins wedding up in the VEEERRRY NW corner of Kansas... the very last town... St. Fracking Francis...

Throw in a cranky wife, and a screaming child... thank god I brought my oversized-soundproof headphones I use when I am on the mower....

< Message edited by jeffk3510 -- 9/29/2011 9:40:12 PM >


_____________________________

Life is tough. The sooner you realize that, the easier it will be.

Currently chasing three kids around the Midwest.

(in reply to jeffk3510)
Post #: 27597
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 9:51:53 PM   
Chickenboy


Posts: 24520
Joined: 6/29/2002
From: San Antonio, TX
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: jeffk3510

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy

Hey Jeff,

Why are July 2012 corn futures holding relatively steady whilest Soybean futures have gotten pummeled lately? For animal feed, they're in lockstep, so I can't rationalize this divergence with animal feed precursors to the Chicoms. Lots of questions about Argentina's crop this year in Soy-no guarantees there.

Is this ethanol production that's backstopping the corn futures? I know ~40% of the crop is going for primary ethanol production (and DDGs used in animal feed subsequently), but is that enough to explain the difference?

Seems like Belarus, Ukraine and Russia will have a decent wheat crop this year, neh? What's the skinny on the Canadians, eh? That'll probably deflate some of the wheat action further.


Ha. Maybe I shouldn't have mentioned I am a broker… so that I don't have to answer questions no one has the answers to...

Your questions about ysb vs corn this year is a mystery in everyone’s book. I've seen reports that the stocks to use ratio on ysb could be NEGATIVE this year... now how the hell that equates to the board being down $2 since September is beyond my knowledge.

The uncertainty in these outside markets has just crushed grain prices as of late. That mixed with harvest pressure. Yes the crop (corn/ysb) will be down substantially going into 2012, but S&D seem to be out of the picture for commodities now a day. They don't seem to have anything to do with it. We're starting to hear of better yields on corn as harvest moves itself north in addition to the outside markets, thus resulting in the funds selling their long positions, taking their profits, and running. However... I don't buy the traders following S&D... as noted above.

One this that is for damn sure is corn vs wheat. If corn is $6.50, wheat won’t be $7.50… one will have to move. Either corn down or wheat up… the market always seems to correct itself. Over what time frame… ehhh

You also are looking at just futures price… the cash price is a totally different animal. I am trading corn a $1 over the board for local cash prices, when historically it is -20c or so….THAT is how poor the crop is in this area and how short the fall crop is. For example.. there is a carry in the corn market futures.. but about a month ago cash corn was actually an inverse out to the Dec11....meaning sport corn was a HOT commodity

Argentina- Beans will be a known commodity come Mayish timeframe and then we will have an idea of direction possibly.

I would say until all of the outside markets and financials pull their head outa their rears, things will be extremely volatile. That mixed with harvest pressure will probably keep things in check. So... in Jan when we're at $10 corn and $15 beans, you can say, damn Jeff, you were wrong as all hell.

I do more commercial brokerage than actual market analysis (charts yadayada)...buy commodity x from coop, sell it to end-user x for x profit. We track local basis (difference between cash and futures price) and just trade that, thus lower our risk SUBSTANTIALLY……..10 to .20 margin depending on how long the hold the position for and how ahead of the game you are. You do that on 10m bushels... my company can make a nice little chunk. This year we won't even come close to those numbers on volume because of the poor crop in both the summer and currently this fall.

One this is for sure.. .we're buying all of the good quality corn and milo we can get our hands on... at any basis level... sitting on it and dumping into the feedlots and ethanol plants in Central Kansas....the margins we're making and are going to make would blow your mind....thats the kind of work I do. Take a position that will work in our favor and move it to x... for x margin.

I also trade local farmers accounts. Soo... Mr. Krehbiel.. what do you think corn will do today... Well, Frank, call me at 1:15 and I will tell you what it DID...

Pretty sure that $7.50-$7.75 will be the top price for corn here in the US. Beyond that, it just doesn't pay to put it through an animal. Thus, yellow dent #2-solely propogated for further feed processing for animal feed-won't be used for animal feed here as much. The poultry margins are negative now, dairy has sucked wind for years (only recently marginally profitable), pork margins held up by trade constraints applied by the chicoms to pork. Why 12% of our poultry exports oughta be tied up by Chinese retribution for Obama's tire tarriffs (and the chicom lash back at poultry) whilest pork products slide on by is beyond me.

Some poultry producers were losing 0.07-0.17/lb. on everything they produced. For mid-sized poultry companies, that translated to $2-4 million / week. Input costs are a major part of that lack of profitability. Feed is ~70% of input costs for poultry, so there you have it. There are more poultry producers in dire straits.

Corn over $7.50 for an extended time will kill corn's unsubsidized animal agricultural market. And if *we* can't afford pay $7.50 / bushel, I doubt that the chicoms can make it work for long either. Of course, market distortions and trade sanctions throw a spanner in that logic before long.

Alright. Nuff said. Jeff-I'll be back in January to tell you, "damn, Jeff-you were wrong as hell!"

_____________________________


(in reply to jeffk3510)
Post #: 27598
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 9:59:35 PM   
jeffk3510


Posts: 4132
Joined: 12/3/2007
From: Kansas
Status: offline
quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy


quote:

ORIGINAL: jeffk3510

quote:

ORIGINAL: Chickenboy

Hey Jeff,

Why are July 2012 corn futures holding relatively steady whilest Soybean futures have gotten pummeled lately? For animal feed, they're in lockstep, so I can't rationalize this divergence with animal feed precursors to the Chicoms. Lots of questions about Argentina's crop this year in Soy-no guarantees there.

Is this ethanol production that's backstopping the corn futures? I know ~40% of the crop is going for primary ethanol production (and DDGs used in animal feed subsequently), but is that enough to explain the difference?

Seems like Belarus, Ukraine and Russia will have a decent wheat crop this year, neh? What's the skinny on the Canadians, eh? That'll probably deflate some of the wheat action further.


Ha. Maybe I shouldn't have mentioned I am a broker… so that I don't have to answer questions no one has the answers to...

Your questions about ysb vs corn this year is a mystery in everyone’s book. I've seen reports that the stocks to use ratio on ysb could be NEGATIVE this year... now how the hell that equates to the board being down $2 since September is beyond my knowledge.

The uncertainty in these outside markets has just crushed grain prices as of late. That mixed with harvest pressure. Yes the crop (corn/ysb) will be down substantially going into 2012, but S&D seem to be out of the picture for commodities now a day. They don't seem to have anything to do with it. We're starting to hear of better yields on corn as harvest moves itself north in addition to the outside markets, thus resulting in the funds selling their long positions, taking their profits, and running. However... I don't buy the traders following S&D... as noted above.

One this that is for damn sure is corn vs wheat. If corn is $6.50, wheat won’t be $7.50… one will have to move. Either corn down or wheat up… the market always seems to correct itself. Over what time frame… ehhh

You also are looking at just futures price… the cash price is a totally different animal. I am trading corn a $1 over the board for local cash prices, when historically it is -20c or so….THAT is how poor the crop is in this area and how short the fall crop is. For example.. there is a carry in the corn market futures.. but about a month ago cash corn was actually an inverse out to the Dec11....meaning sport corn was a HOT commodity

Argentina- Beans will be a known commodity come Mayish timeframe and then we will have an idea of direction possibly.

I would say until all of the outside markets and financials pull their head outa their rears, things will be extremely volatile. That mixed with harvest pressure will probably keep things in check. So... in Jan when we're at $10 corn and $15 beans, you can say, damn Jeff, you were wrong as all hell.

I do more commercial brokerage than actual market analysis (charts yadayada)...buy commodity x from coop, sell it to end-user x for x profit. We track local basis (difference between cash and futures price) and just trade that, thus lower our risk SUBSTANTIALLY……..10 to .20 margin depending on how long the hold the position for and how ahead of the game you are. You do that on 10m bushels... my company can make a nice little chunk. This year we won't even come close to those numbers on volume because of the poor crop in both the summer and currently this fall.

One this is for sure.. .we're buying all of the good quality corn and milo we can get our hands on... at any basis level... sitting on it and dumping into the feedlots and ethanol plants in Central Kansas....the margins we're making and are going to make would blow your mind....thats the kind of work I do. Take a position that will work in our favor and move it to x... for x margin.

I also trade local farmers accounts. Soo... Mr. Krehbiel.. what do you think corn will do today... Well, Frank, call me at 1:15 and I will tell you what it DID...

Pretty sure that $7.50-$7.75 will be the top price for corn here in the US. Beyond that, it just doesn't pay to put it through an animal. Thus, yellow dent #2-solely propogated for further feed processing for animal feed-won't be used for animal feed here as much. The poultry margins are negative now, dairy has sucked wind for years (only recently marginally profitable), pork margins held up by trade constraints applied by the chicoms to pork. Why 12% of our poultry exports oughta be tied up by Chinese retribution for Obama's tire tarriffs (and the chicom lash back at poultry) whilest pork products slide on by is beyond me.

Some poultry producers were losing 0.07-0.17/lb. on everything they produced. For mid-sized poultry companies, that translated to $2-4 million / week. Input costs are a major part of that lack of profitability. Feed is ~70% of input costs for poultry, so there you have it. There are more poultry producers in dire straits.

Corn over $7.50 for an extended time will kill corn's unsubsidized animal agricultural market. And if *we* can't afford pay $7.50 / bushel, I doubt that the chicoms can make it work for long either. Of course, market distortions and trade sanctions throw a spanner in that logic before long.

Alright. Nuff said. Jeff-I'll be back in January to tell you, "damn, Jeff-you were wrong as hell!"


Agreed. At the levels of corn and beans here a month or so ago rationing was talked about heavily.. and you're seeing the result... Ethanol plants would just SHUTDOWN if corn hit the levels some traders thought we would see... but hey, when we were at $4 corn, I thought the guys that said we would see $7 corn were nuts.

On poultry... we do business out of NE Oklahoma and SE Kansas into the Springdale area for poultry HUGE Tyson area... lots of poultry... the crop was so bad in that area this year... and the aflotoxin levels in corn were so high... 2 to 300 parts per million that that plants refused it because it kills poultry anything over 20 parts per million... and dairy cattle too. Crazy year it has been.. fun though!

Are you large or small animal vet? Or both..?

< Message edited by jeffk3510 -- 9/29/2011 10:01:17 PM >


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(in reply to Chickenboy)
Post #: 27599
RE: THE THREAD!!! - 9/29/2011 10:03:09 PM   
USSAmerica


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Post #: 27600
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