|
ASA Forms Working Group to Develop Recommendations on
Futures Market Performance, Meets with Grain Exchanges
April 3, 2008… Saint Louis, Missouri… Amid concerns that futures
markets are becoming less effective in allowing farmers to manage risk,
the American Soybean Association (ASA) has formed a Market Performance
Working Group (MPWG) to examine the issues affecting markets and to make
recommendations to the ASA Board of Directors on what might be done to
improve the situation.
The Working Group consists of ASA Board members Scott Fritz from
Winamac, Ind., Ray Gaesser from Corning, Iowa, Ron Kindred from Atlanta,
Ill., and Steve Wellman from Syracuse, Neb., and Tennessee Soybean
Association State Executive Parks Wells. The Working Group will be
analyzing factors affecting markets, interacting with other groups to
try to develop solutions, and developing recommendations and positions
for ASA’s consideration.
While farmers certainly have welcomed higher prices for their crops,
soybean and other farmers have increasingly become concerned about the
growing lack of convergence between futures and cash prices, whether
fund participation in markets and related volatility has resulted in a
larger than normal basis, and the fact that many elevators have stopped
offering bids for grain beyond 60 days.
Kicking off the efforts of the new Working Group, Fritz met today in
Chicago with representatives from the Chicago Board of Trade,
Minneapolis Grain Exchange, Kansas City Board of Trade, CME Group, and
the Commodity Markets Council (CMC). The meeting was organized by the
CMC and the exchanges to gather input from market participants on how to
improve futures market performance.
Topics discussed included changes to delivery procedures, expansion
of delivery territory, capping index fund hedge exemptions, and other
possible actions or mechanisms to improve market performance.
In his presentation Fritz noted, "Farmers are losing their ability to
pass off risk due to lack of convergence between futures and cash
prices, the lack of effective delivery mechanisms, and the halting of
deferred bids by many elevators. For farmers and other traditional
hedgers, we need to improve futures market performance so that they once
again can be used as effective hedging tools."
The MPWG also has meetings scheduled on April 8, with the American
Farm Bureau Federation in Saint Louis, and on April 22, with the U.S.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission in Washington, D.C.
--30--
For more information, contact:
Scott Fritz, ASA Board member, (574) 595-0392, sfritz@hughes.net
Bob Callanan, ASA Communications Director, (314) 576-1770, bcallanan@soy.org
Access this release at http://www.soygrowers.com/newsroom/news.htm
|