Wasde: US wheat output, stocks seen higher, global stocks slightly lower

The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) boosted its 2023-24 US production, ending stocks and domestic consumption estimates while slightly trimming global output and supply projections

The US Department of Agriculture (USDA) boosted its 2023-24 US production, ending stocks and domestic consumption estimates while slightly trimming global output and supply projections.

Ending stocks of the 2023-24 crop year are expected to total 670 million bushels (18.23 million tonnes) in the October update to the World Agricultural Supply and Demand Estimates (Wasde), which is 55 million bu higher than projected a month ago.

The ending stocks estimate for 2023/24 is slightly higher than the 660 million bu (17.96 million tonnes) projected by analysts surveyed by Fastmarkets Agriculture before the release of the report.

US wheat output is expected to total 1.812 billion bushels (49.3 million tonnes) in 2023-24, which is up 78 million bushels from last month’s estimate and 9.8% higher than 1.65 billion bu projected for 2022-23.

Domestic consumption is projected at 1.159 billion bu (31.5 million tonnes), up 30 million bushels from the September estimate and higher than the 2022-23 forecast of 1.131 billion bushels.

The 2023-24 export estimate was unchanged from last month at 700 million bushels (19.1 million tonnes).

“The season-average farm price is reduced $0.20 per bushel to $7.30 on higher projected stocks and expectations for futures and cash prices for the remainder of the marketing year,” the report said.

View our wheat prices

US wheat classes

HRW (hard red winter) wheat production is projected to total 601 million bushels (16.4 million mt) in 2023-24, up from 585 million bushels projected in September.

Hard red spring (HRS) output is projected to reach 468 million bushels (12.7 million tonnes), much higher than last month’s estimate of 413 million bushels.

The USDA pegged soft red winter (SRW) production at 449 million bushels (12.2 million tonnes), up from 440 million bushels a month ago.

White wheat production is expected to total 235 million bushels (6.4 million tonnes), which is down from 239 million tonnes in last month’s Wasde.

Durum output is forecast to come in at 59 million bushels (1.61 million tonnes), up from 57 million tonnes last month.

Global outlook

Global ending stocks for 2023-24 are projected at 258.13 million tonnes, down from 258.61 million tonnes projected last month.

The world is expected to produce 783.34 million tonnes of wheat in 2023-24, which is down 4 million tonnes from 787.34 million tonnes in the September report.

The global production decline is due to lower output in Australia, Kazakhstan, and Ethiopia, which is only partially offset by higher US production.

The Australian production estimate was trimmed by 1.5 million tonnes to 24.5 million tonnes because of lingering dry conditions over most of the growing areas.

“Ethiopia is also lowered 2.0 million tons to 5.5 million on reduced harvested area, dry conditions in August and September, and less input use,” according to the report.

Kazakhstan’s output was reduced by 2 million tonnes to 13 million tonnes because of “suboptimal growing conditions,” according to the USDA.

What to read next
Grains and soybean Prices have been dropping amid ample offers despite lower-than-expected output in 2023-2024
Brazil's agricultural exports soared in the first week of March, which underscores the country's pivotal role in global food supply
Total EU soybean import for the year to date reaches 7.2 million tonnes, with Spain, Netherlands, Germany, Italy and Portugal being the main importers
The boost to the outlook is due to higher than expected yields and larger planted areas, compared to the drought-affected 2022/23 year
Published in a recent Gaftaworld issue, Tim Worledge, editorial director at Fastmarkets Agriculture shares his view on oilseeds and veg oils 2024 demand outlooks
Brazilian soybean prices are under further pressure from another bumper harvest and weak Chinese demand