Commodities
UN aid chief to Russia: Don’t ‘chuck away’ Black Sea grain deal
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The cargo ship Mehmet Bey waits to pass through the Bosphorus Strait off the shores of Yenikapi during a misty morning in Istanbul, Turkey, October 31, 2022. REUTERS/Mehmet Emin Calsikan/File Photo
By Michelle Nichols
UNITED NATIONS (Reuters) -If Russia does not agree to extend a deal allowing the safe export of grain and fertilizer from Ukrainian ports, it is unlikely Western states will continue cooperating with U.N. officials helping Moscow with its exports, the United Nations aid chief said on Friday.
Russia has threatened to quit the deal, which expires on July 17, because several demands to dispatch its own grain and fertilizer have not been met. The last three ships traveling under the deal are loading cargoes at the Ukrainian port of Odesa and are likely to depart on Monday.
“The world has seen the value of the Black Sea Initiative … this isn’t something you chuck away,” the U.N.’s Martin Griffiths told reporters.
The United Nations and Turkey brokered the Black Sea Grain Initiative with Russia and Ukraine in July 2022 to help tackle a global food crisis worsened by Moscow’s invasion of its neighbor and blockade of Ukrainian Black Sea ports.
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskiy discussed the deal with Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan in Istanbul on Friday.
“We are working on how long we can extend (the deal) after July 17. Our hope is that, it will be extended at least once every three months, not every two months. We will make an effort in this regard and try to increase the duration of it to two years,” Erdogan said in a joint news conference with Zelenskiy.
Zelenskiy said the Black Sea deal was important to help the world fight hunger.
“It is crucial that we take action in such a way that the life of the grain corridor, and therefore the lives of other people, does not depend on the mood with which the President of the Russian Federation wakes up,” Zelenskiy said.
More than 32 million tonnes of corn, wheat and other grains have been exported by Ukraine under the arrangement. Russia has complained that not enough reaches poor countries, but the United Nations argues that it has benefited those states by helping lower food prices more than 20% globally.
Griffiths is the lead U.N. official on the Ukraine Black Sea deal, while senior U.N. trade official Rebeca Grynspan is working to ease Russia’s food and fertilizer exports.
Grynspan hopes to travel to Moscow before July 17 and Griffiths hopes to meet with the parties next week in Istanbul, where a joint coordination center of Russian, Ukrainian, Turkish and U.N. officials implements the Black Sea deal.
AMMONIA PIPELINE DAMAGE
Grynspan has been working with the United States, European Union, Britain and others to smooth Russian exports. Russia has described the Black Sea deal and the agreement to facilitate its own exports as a single package.
“A single package works both ways,” said Griffiths, suggesting that any Western cooperation with U.N. officials on Russian exports might evaporate if the Black Sea deal was not extended by Moscow.
To convince Russia to agree to the Black Sea deal, a three-year memorandum of understanding was struck at the same time under which U.N. officials agreed to help Russia with its food and fertilizer exports.
While Russian exports of food and fertilizer are not subject to Western sanctions imposed after the February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, Moscow says restrictions on payments, logistics and insurance have amounted to a barrier to shipments.
Russia’s demands include resuming Black Sea ammonia exports and reconnecting the Russian Agricultural Bank to the SWIFT payment system. The Black Sea deal allows for ammonia exports – a key ingredient in nitrate fertilizer – but none has shipped.
A pipeline, which once pumped up to 2.5 million tonnes of ammonia annually for global export to Ukraine’s Pivdennyi port on the Black Sea from Togliatti in western Russia, has lain idle since the start of the war.
Last month it was damaged in three places, Griffiths said, adding that the U.N. had offered to send in a team to assess it. He said both sides were interested, but a team had not yet been deployed because the pipeline damage was in an active war zone.
He said if it could be repaired then an arrangement would be needed to protect it from the war. According to the International Energy Agency, it is the world’s longest ammonia pipeline at about 2,470 kilometres (1,534 miles).
“So there’s lots of impediments to making that a realistic prospect immediately,” Griffiths said.
As the expiration date looms, the Black Sea grain deal is grinding to a halt.
No new ships have been registered to travel to Ukraine since June 26. Under the deal, Russia, Ukraine and Turkey approved the ships to travel and all vessels are inspected by a joint team of Russian, Ukrainian, Turkish and U.N. officials.
Commodities
Oil jumps more than 3% on concern over more sanctions on Russia and Iran
By Anna Hirtenstein
LONDON (Reuters) -Oil prices surged on Friday and were on track for a third straight week of gains as traders focused on potential supply disruptions from more sanctions on Russia and Iran.
futures gained $2.66, or 3.5%, to $79.58 a barrel by 1154 GMT, reaching their highest in more than three months. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures advanced $2.64, or 3.6%, to $76.56.
Over the three weeks to Jan. 10, Brent has climbed 9% while WTI has jumped 10%.
“There are several drivers today. Longer term, the market is focused on the prospect for additional sanctions,” said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank. “Short term, the weather is very cold across the U.S., driving up demand for fuels.”
Ahead of U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration on Jan. 20, expectations are mounting over potential supply disruptions from tighter sanctions against Iran and Russia while oil stockpiles remain low.
This could materialise even earlier, with U.S. President Joe Biden expected to announce new sanctions targeting Russia’s economy before Trump takes office. A key target of sanctions so far has been Russia’s oil and shipping industry.
“That would be the farewell gift of the Biden administration,” said PVM analyst Tamas Varga. Existing and possible further sanctions, as well as market expectations of draws on fuel inventories because of the cold weather, are driving prices higher, he added.
The U.S. weather bureau expects central and eastern parts of the country to experience below-average temperatures. Many regions in Europe have also been hit by extreme cold and are likely to continue to experience a colder than usual start to the year, which JPMorgan analysts expect to boost demand.
“We anticipate a significant year-over-year increase in global oil demand of 1.6 million barrels a day in the first quarter of 2025, primarily boosted by … demand for , kerosene and LPG,” they said in a note on Friday.
Meanwhile, the premium on the front-month Brent contract over the six-month contract reached its widest since August this week, potentially indicating supply tightness at a time of rising demand.
Inflation worries are also delivering a boost to prices, said Saxo Bank’s Hansen. Investors are growing concerned about Trump’s planned tariffs, which could drive inflation higher. A popular trade to hedge against rising consumer prices is through buying oil futures.
Oil prices have rallied despite the U.S. dollar strengthening for six straight weeks, making crude oil more expensive outside the United States.
Commodities
Will USDA data dump spoil the bullish party for corn? -Braun
By Karen Braun
NAPERVILLE, Illinois (Reuters) -If anything can derail a price rally, it is a curveball from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Chicago corn futures have ticked slightly lower to start the year, but they had climbed nearly 12% in the final two months of 2024, an unusually strong late-year run.
Speculators now hold their most bullish corn view in two years, and luckily for them, the trade has already accepted that last year’s U.S. corn yield was a whopper.
Friday will feature USDA’s biggest data release of the year, with primary focus on the most recent U.S. corn and soybean harvests. U.S. quarterly stocks, U.S. winter wheat seedings and routine global supply and demand updates will also compete for attention.
U.S. CORN AND BEANS
On average, analysts peg U.S. corn yield at 182.7 bushels per acre, down from 183.1 in November. The trade estimate is more than 5 bushels above last year’s record and above USDA’s initial trendline yield for the first time in six years.
Bearish yield outcomes are less likely when the estimates are already large, and only four of 19 polled analysts see corn yield rising from November. However, the range of trade estimates (2.4 bpa) is smaller than usual, flagging the potential for surprise.
In the last decade, analysts anticipated the wrong direction of U.S. corn yield in January only once (2019). They did so three times for soybean yield (2016, 2019, 2022).
But bets are somewhat off for U.S. soybean yield outcomes because USDA’s slashing of the forecast in November was the month’s largest cut in 31 years. Trade estimates indicate some uncertainty around U.S. soybean production as the ranges for both yield and harvested area are historically wide.
Regardless, U.S. soybean supplies are expected to remain ample and at multi-year highs. However, USDA last month pegged 2024-25 U.S. corn ending stocks below the prior year’s level for the first time.
If USDA cuts U.S. corn ending stocks on Friday as expected, it would be the agency’s seventh consecutive monthly reduction. Such a streak has not been observed in at least two decades, reflective of the strong demand that has recently lifted corn prices.
From a market reaction standpoint, these demand dynamics could be somewhat insulating if the U.S. corn crop comes in larger than expected. The last two times CBOT corn had a distinctly negative reaction on January report day were 2012 and 2024, the latter sparked by a huge yield above all trade estimates.
U.S. WHEAT
USDA will not officially issue 2025-26 outlooks until May, but the wheat market will receive its first piece of 2025-26 U.S. crop intel on Friday with the winter wheat planting survey. Total (EPA:) U.S. winter wheat acres are pegged at 33.37 million, very close to both last year and the five-year average.
Analysts have had a rough time anticipating the planting survey in the last two years, coming in almost 1.4 million acres too high last year but lowballing by nearly 2.5 million acres in 2023.
Wheat traders have struggled to find viable bullish narratives despite wheat stocks among major exporters seen dropping to 17-year lows, so another big miss in the U.S. wheat acreage could either support or undermine the recent sentiment.
SOUTH AMERICA
The U.S. crops will probably dominate the headlines on Friday, but it is not too early to watch out for forecast changes in South America. Analysts see USDA upping Brazil’s 2024-25 soybean harvest to a record 170.28 million metric tons from the previous 169 million.
USDA has increased Brazil’s soy crop in three of the last eight Januarys, both on area and yield improvements, and many industry participants have already been factoring in a number north of 170 million tons.
For Argentina, there are already fears that ongoing dry weather could eventually warrant more significant cuts to soybean and corn crops than are anticipated for Friday. American and European weather model runs on Thursday remained stingy with the rainfall over the next two weeks.
USDA already hiked Argentina’s soybean output last month on higher area. The agency increased the crop last January but reduced it in the prior three Januarys. Current crop conditions are slightly worse than a year ago but better than in the prior three years.
Karen Braun is a market analyst for Reuters. Views expressed above are her own.
Commodities
Oil prices steady; traders digest mixed US inventories, weak China data
Investing.com– Oil prices steadied Thursday as traders digested data showing an unexpected increase in US product inventories, while weak economic data from top importer China weighed.
At 05:25 ET (10:25 GMT), expiring in March gained 0.1% to $76.25 a barrel, while rose 0.1% to $73.37 a barrel.
The crude benchmarks had slumped more than 1% on Wednesday, but trading ranges, and volumes, are likely to be limited throughout Thursday with the US market closed to honor former President Jimmy Carter, ahead of a state funeral later in the session.
China inflation muted in December
Chinese inflation, as measured by the , remained unchanged in December, while the shrank for a 27th consecutive month, data showed on Thursday.
The reading pointed to limited improvement in China’s prolonged disinflationary trend, even as the government doled out its most aggressive round of stimulus measures yet through late-2024.
China is the world’s biggest oil importer, and has been a key source of anxiety for crude markets. Traders fear that weak economic growth in the country will eat into oil demand.
The country is also facing potential economic headwinds from the incoming Donald Trump administration in the US, as Trump has vowed to impose steep trade tariffs on Beijing.
US oil product inventories rise sharply
U.S. gasoline and distillate inventories grew substantially more than expected in the week to January 3, government data showed on Wednesday.
inventories grew 6.3 million barrels against expectations of 0.5 mb, while grew 6.1 mb on expectations of 0.5 mb.
Overall crude also shrank less than expected, at 0.96 mb, against expectations of 1.8 mb.
The build in product inventories marked an eighth straight week of outsized product builds, and spurred concerns that demand in the world’s biggest fuel consumer was cooling.
While cold weather in the country spurred some demand for heating, it also disrupted holiday travel in several areas.
EIA data also showed that US imports from Canada rose last week to the highest on record, ahead of incoming U.S. president Donald Trump’s plans to levy a 25% tariff on Canadian imports.
Canada has been the top source of U.S. oil imports for many years, and supplied more than half of the total U.S. crude imports in 2023.
Strength in the also weighed on crude prices, as the greenback shot back up to more than two-year highs on hawkish signals from the Federal Reserve.
A strong dollar pressures oil demand by making crude more expensive for international buyers.
(Ambar Warrick contributed to this article.)
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