North Coast NSW
20 May 2020
Date | N NSW '23 | N NSW '22 | N NSW '5YA |
---|---|---|---|
06-Jan-23 | 399 | 295 | 356 |
13-Jan-23 | 400 | 295 | 358 |
20-Jan-23 | 400 | 270 | 356 |
27-Jan-23 | 405 | 273 | 358 |
03-Feb-23 | 400 | 275 | 358 |
10-Feb-23 | 405 | 275 | 355 |
17-Feb-23 | 405 | 275 | 352 |
24-Feb-23 | 405 | 285 | 351 |
03-Mar-23 | 390 | 295 | 348 |
10-Mar-23 | 390 | 300 | 347 |
17-Mar-23 | 390 | 305 | 351 |
24-Mar-23 | 390 | 305 | 351 |
31-Mar-23 | 390 | 315 | 358 |
07-Apr-23 | 390 | 315 | 358 |
14-Apr-23 | 388 | 315 | 359 |
21-Apr-23 | 385 | 315 | 358 |
28-Apr-23 | 385 | 315 | 354 |
05-May-23 | 385 | 315 | 350 |
12-May-23 | 385 | 343 | 352 |
19-May-23 | 385 | 370 | 360 |
26-May-23 | 385 | 400 | 364 |
02-Jun-23 | 385 | 380 | 362 |
09-Jun-23 | 385 | 440 | 375 |
16-Jun-23 | 385 | 460 | 380 |
23-Jun-23 | 385 | 435 | 380 |
30-Jun-23 | 385 | 420 | 380 |
07-Jul-23 | 385 | 410 | 378 |
14-Jul-23 | 380 | 408 | 377 |
21-Jul-23 | 375 | 405 | 376 |
28-Jul-23 | 375 | 400 | 379 |
04-Aug-23 | 380 | 400 | 382 |
11-Aug-23 | 380 | 340 | 375 |
18-Aug-23 | 385 | 360 | 383 |
25-Aug-23 | 390 | 380 | 389 |
01-Sep-23 | 390 | 365 | 387 |
08-Sep-23 | 365 | 360 | |
15-Sep-23 | 370 | 364 | |
22-Sep-23 | 370 | 368 | |
29-Sep-23 | 370 | 372 | |
06-Oct-23 | 380 | 372 | |
13-Oct-23 | 390 | 378 | |
20-Oct-23 | 395 | 377 | |
27-Oct-23 | 400 | 375 | |
03-Nov-23 | 400 | 369 | |
10-Nov-23 | 400 | 367 | |
17-Nov-23 | 390 | 366 | |
24-Nov-23 | 385 | 367 | |
01-Dec-23 | 388 | 373 | |
08-Dec-23 | 390 | 372 | |
15-Dec-23 | 390 | 366 | |
22-Dec-23 | 395 | 371 | |
29-Dec-23 | 398 | 371 |
Notes:
Commentary
- Wheat: Steady ($365 to $375/tonne). Barley: Up $25 ($335 to $345/tonne). Maize: Down $5 ($375 to $385/tonne). Sorghum: Up $15 ($300 to $310/tonne).
- Rainfall was again present across the southern Queensland (QLD) and border regions last Thursday, with upwards of 30mm received across the Downs.
- Wheat harvest across the southern regions is now expected to commence in the second half of October, alongside barley in early October should conditions allow. APW SFW wheat spreads remain wide, ranging from $70 - $100 with growers remaining slow sellers.
- Both old and new crop barley prices were generally unchanged this week. Local feed interest from consumers remains low in anticipation of abundant east coast feed grade wheat supplies come harvest.
- Old crop sorghum remains firm with packers continuing to accumulate parcels. Markets were stronger with planting delays and export demand slowly increasing.