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ICE Canola Climbs On Weak C$, Steady Export Demand

| 1 min read

By Dwayne Klassen

By Dwayne Klassen, Resource News International

January 22, 2010

Winnipeg – Canola contracts on the ICE Futures Canada platform were trading at higher price levels at midday with the continued weakness of the Canadian dollar and steady exporter demand behind the upward price momentum, market watchers said.

Some of the export demand was said to be covering both old as well as fresh sales, brokers said.

Overbought price sentiment and the buying back of previously sold positions by a variety of market players also contributed to the strength displayed by canola, traders said.

Adding to the support in canola was the lack of farmer deliveries into the cash market. Traders noted that producers have slammed the doors shut on their canola bins and were waiting for better cash bids before unlocking those doors.

There were reports that a few of Viterra’s elevators in Alberta have tightened basis levels in hopes of enticing producers to deliver some canola, traders said.

The upside in canola, however, was limited by the losses seen overnight in Malaysian palm oil. Weakness in CBOT soybean and soyoil futures also were restricting some of the price gains, brokers said.

The large global oilseed supply situation was also seen as an undermining price influence.

There were an estimated 9,358 canola contracts traded at 11:02 CST.

There were 15 western barley futures traded as of 11:02 CST. Activity in barley was a light two way affair between commercials, brokers said