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Traditionally, the July-November soyabean spread has been viewed as the quintessential old crop/new crop position to hold over the US growing season as the vagaries of Midwest growing weather coupled with gyrations in global demand make for volatile prices. But for many traders the 2014 'July-Nov' is already beginning to look like an overly risky proposition after having recently accelerated to record highs for this time of year just as a flow of imports look set to buffet nearby prices by replenishing end-user stockpiles.
Nonetheless, traders still want exposure to this market as it transitions from historical tightness to relative abundance over the coming months, and so are opting for a less volatile spread that still straddles the 2013/14 and 2014/15 crop years but tends to display fewer extreme price moves than the July-Nov: the August-September spread.
While the July-November remains by far the most popular and liquid spread in 2014 soyabean futures contracts, it is also the most volatile, and has started to give some traders who are holding it plenty of anxiety as crop prices gyrate lately in response to reports of Brazilian imports and Chinese soya crusher purchase cancellations.
Even so, the July-November recently widened out to its highest level ever for this time of year on the back of brisk processor demand for nearby supplies and widespread expectations of a rise in 2014 US soya plantings that should set the stage for record-sized crop come harvest.
All told, the July-November spread remains below its all-time high of just over $3.30 a bushel scored last July, but is already close to $1 a bushel above where the 2013 spread was trading at this point a year ago. Indeed, only the 2004 July-November spread traded as high as this year's, forcing traders and analysts to draw comparisons with that year's market developments which started out strongly thanks to brisk global demand but faltered mid-year on the back of Chinese purchase cancellations.
This year's recent rash of Chinese cancellations also draw comparisons to the 2004 defaults, and have raised red flags for several traders who had been onboard the July - November for most of the year so far. Clearly, many traders remain in the spread, but tensions are rising over whether it will repeat the mid-May collapse seen in 2004 that saw it contract from more than $2.60 a bushel to less than $1.20 by early June as news of the Chinese cancellations sparked a wave of panic selling among commercials in South America and elsewhere.
The 2014 cancellations have so far been offset by the continued strong demand by US processors. But questions are starting to emerge about if that demand pace will remain as brisk going forward in the face of a quickening stream of soyabean and soya product imports from other countries. At face value, the imported tonnage's involved so far appear to be far too small to make any meaningful impact on end-user inventories. But a recent slow-down in the climb in cash basis levels at a number of key commercial markets is giving some traders sitting on long July exposure the jitters, especially amid the swirls of cancellation rumours and import chatter.
Even amid the recent price turbulence, however, there remains an enduring appetite to sustain long-sided exposure to old crop soyabeans while domestic stocks remain tight, and to ratchet up short-sided bets on new crop prices as 2014 planting gets underway. An effective alternative to the whippy and high-priced July-November spread is the August-September spread, where the August contract is tied to the very last remnants of the 2013 crop and the September contract represents the first batch of the 2014 harvest.

Copyright Reuters, 2014

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