Bread wheat fell below the price of fodder – Agro Plovdiv

by time news

2023-07-10 08:47:07

On Sofia Stokova Exchange AD, the previous week was active and the trade moved. In the “Grain” subdivision of SSB AD, the quotations for wheat are from BGN 657.00 to BGN 310.00/ton, the exchange reports. Buyers have accepted the low price and deals were concluded at BGN 310.00/ton, DAP delivery (the seller bears the costs of delivery on site). 1500 tons of bread wheat were sold at the indicated price.

Barley harvest

At the same time, feed wheat purchase announcements are at BGN 320.00/ton. There are no deals for this item.

Maize is available at BGN 390.00 – 450.00/ton, and oilseed sunflower – from BGN 730.00 to 750.00/ton. And here there are no concluded contracts, only offers.

At the beginning of July, prices are low and calm in the international markets. In the US, FOB bread wheat (at port) dropped $4.00 to $258.00/t, while those in France, Ukraine and Russia were flat at €228.00/t, $235.00/t respectively and $230.00/ton. The movement in corn is stronger – in the USA the price is down by 12.00 dollars to 241.00 USD/ton, France down by 7.75 euros to 227.50 euros/ton, Russia again unchanged and 228.00 USD/ton.

The price of barley in Russia continues to stagnate and remains at 240.00 USD/ton, and in France plus 6.00 EUR to 212.00 EUR/ton. Rapeseed on Euronext, which experienced a significant appreciation and subsequent collapse in recent months, now added 7.75 euros to a level of 443.50 euros/ton.

The price of unrefined sunflower oil on the Rotterdam Stock Exchange, which has been moving sinusoidally for some time and recently continued to adhere to a downward curve, having reached below one thousand dollars, and at the end of April it had jumped sharply upwards, this week rose by $ 50.00 , and is now quoted at $1000.00/ton. Refined sugar continued to climb for August delivery, adding $36.70 these days to $657.30/ton on the London Stock Exchange.

#Bread #wheat #fell #price #fodder #Agro #Plovdiv

You may also like

Leave a Comment