The August USDA Report was an important one. The market was looking for a lead on how ongoing production write downs for the EU and Black Sea would play out in the global numbers.
The expectations were for global production to fall significantly, for this to flow into global stock estimates, and for it to result in increased demand for US wheat, allowing US wheat stocks to decline.
What was not really known was the quantum of the expected moves, and how small adjustments elsewhere in the global balance sheet might impact the final numbers.
In the end it played out pretty much as expected, with a 6.63 mill t drop in global production. In turn, with lower feed use of wheat in the Black Sea and EU, global stock estimates fell by 1.9 mill t.
For the US, production estimates were lowered a little, reflecting results from the US Spring Wheat tour which saw yields under those being previously assumed by the USDA.
However, US exports were raised allowing US ending stock estimates to fall by 1.35 mill t compared to the July estimates.
Overall the report has probably disappointed the market and, when combined with larger than expected production and stock estimates for US corn and soybeans, prices fell sharply after the report was released.
Both the EU and Black Sea production numbers were being very closely watched. Regularly a range of forecasting agencies have been writing down the crops in both regions for quite a while now.
The USDA saw this as pulling another 7.5 mill t off the EU crop. Year on year this is a drop of 14.18 mill t, or 9.3 percent.
On the Australian number, it is not unusual for the USDA to delay adjusting our estimate until we get to September or October.
They seem to take little notice of our winter rains and prefer to assess production once we are into spring.
Also, the Australian season is hard to judge at the moment, with NSW being the epicentre of the drought, but Victoria and South Australia getting enough rain to keep potential alive, and Western Australia also fairing quite well.
Meanwhile Australian prices have continued to surge. The market is also adjusting itself so that up country prices are rising faster than port based prices.
In southern regions this will slow the flow of grain to export terminals and turn it around to go north. In NSW it will allow grain shipped in from South Australia and Western Australia to move to country consumption points. If the drop in CBOT futures is sustained, it may cap our prices for a while.