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About Wheat (W)
A rose by any other name may be a rose, however Wheat by any other
name is not. There are three main types of Wheat with active,
liquid futures contracts traded on them: Soft Red Winter Wheat
(Chicago Board of Trade), Hard Red Winter Wheat (Kansas City Board
of Trade), and Hard Red Spring Wheat (Minneapolis Board of Trade).
In futures vernacular, each type of Wheat is typically referred
to by the city in which it is traded, such as Chicago Wheat is
used instead of Soft Red Winter Wheat, while Kansas City and Minneapolis
refer to Hard Winter and Spring respectively.
Though their are many different varieties of Wheat grown throughout
the world, such as Soft/Hard/White/Red, there are only two main
classifications of Wheat: Winter and Spring. Winter Wheat is Wheat
which is planted in the Winter, hence the name. Spring Wheat is
planted in the Spring. Each particular type of Wheat: Hard Red,
Soft Red, Durum and White requires slightly different climatic
conditions for growth and is best suited for different types uses.
The most prevalent class of Wheat grown in the Untied States
is Hard Red Winter, or Kansas City Board of Trade Wheat. Hard
Red Winter Wheat is grown predominantly in Kansas, Nebraska, Oklahoma,
and the Texas Panhandle. The cold, sub zero winters and the general
lack of precipitation make these regions of the country ideal
for Hard Red Winter Wheat production. The primary use of Hard
Red Winter Wheat Flour is for bread making. Futures trading in
Hard Red Winter Wheat is done on the Kansas City Board of Trade
(KCBT).
Soft Red Winter Wheat futures, the most actively traded Wheat
futures contract, are traded on the Chicago Board of Trade (CBOT).
The first modern futures contract was for Soft Red Winter Wheat.
Soft Red Winter Wheat is grown in diverse areas of the country:
Central Texas Northeast towards the Great Lakes and then east
to the Atlantic. Soft Red Wheat is grown in more humid environments,
not suited to hard grain production. The flour from Soft Red Winter
Wheat is used to make cakes, cookies, snack foods, crackers, and
pastries.
Hard Red Spring Wheat is grown in the Northern Plains states
where the winters are too severe for winter wheat production,
but the rich black soil and the dry, hot summers make it ideal
for this type of wheat. The major producing states are Montana,
Wyoming, North and South Dakota as well as Idaho. This high grade
Wheat is suitable for milling and used primarily in breads. Futures
on Hard Red Spring Wheat are traded on the Minneapolis Board of
Trade.
The other varieties of Wheat grown in the United States are Durum,
and White Wheat. Durum Wheat is the hardest of all the wheat kernels,
and contain the highest proportion of protein of any of the classes
of wheat. Used primarily in the production of pasta, spaghetti,
macaroni and other various pastas. Due to its high protein content,
Durum wheat flour is not suitable for breads or pastries. Both
Winter and Spring Wheat strains are grown in the United States.
Grown primarily in Michigan, New York, Oregon, and Washington.
White wheat accounts for the least amount of acreage grown of
any of the Wheat varieties. White wheat can, and is often substituted
for Soft Red Winter Wheat, as its protein content and texture
mill into a flour which is suited for similar purposes: cakes,
cookies, snack foods, crackers, and pastries.
Each of the exchanges does specify a specific type and grade
of Wheat for delivery against its contract, most of the exchanges
allow for substitutions at variable price differentials (premiums
or discounts). Because of the major differences in the production
cycle and uses of Spring and Winter Wheat, we have broken them
down separately on the following pages.
Wheat is one of the oldest and most widely used food crops in
the world. The five main classes of wheat grown in the US are
Hard Red Winter, Soft Red Winter, Hard Red Spring, Durum, and
White. The prominent class of Wheat grown in the US is Hard Red
Winter Wheat, which accounts for nearly half of US production.
The Chicago Board of Trade Wheat contract is on the second most
widely grown variety of Wheat: Soft Red Winter Wheat, while the
Kansas City Board of Trade contract calls for delivery of Hard
Red Winter Wheat.
Winter Wheat is planted in the fall, goes into dormancy during
the winter and is harvested for grain during the following spring.
During ideal weather conditions for early fall growth, much of
the Winter Wheat (KCBT) grown in the southern plains is grazed
by Cattle prior to the wheat entering dormancy for the winter.
Wheat is usually planted in September or early October when the
soil is sufficiently moist to germinate the seed. Late season
warm spells are a potential problem during planting, as the warmth
allow insects to survive long enough to eat the wheat seeds. After
planting, freezing temperatures and a blanket of snow protects
the seeds while they lay dormant awaiting spring thaw.
Early warm weather is another hazard the seeds must face. Early
thaws followed by a frost can cause the soil to heave, severing
the stem from the root system. Wheat traders watch the weather
very closely in mid February for signs of early thaws followed
by frosts. As Winter Wheats protective blanket of snow disappears,
the small Wheat shoots, which look like grass, begin to grow taller
and begin to form a head. The head of a wheat stalk are small
seeds or kernels which is what is milled into flour.
Usual Planting Dates for Winter Wheat
(Top 5 producing States)
| State |
Begin |
Most Active |
End |
| Kansas |
Sep 10 |
Sep 20 - Oct 10 |
Oct 25 |
| Oklahoma |
Sep 3 |
Sep 22 - Oct 12 |
Nov 2 |
| Texas |
Aug 31 |
Sep 16 - Oct 21 |
Dec 3 |
| Washington |
Sep 1 |
Sep 5 - Oct 5 |
Oct 30 |
| Colorado |
Aug 25 |
Sep 10 - Sep 25 |
Oct 10 |
Dates based on the December 1997 USDA Agricultural Statistics
Board Usual Planting and Harvesting Dates report
During the heading stage of development the wheat crop is the
most vulnerable to damage. In order for Wheat to head it must
pollinate, which requires adequate precipitation as well as seasonable
temperatures. In normal years, Winter Wheat pollinates in early
May. Typically, as the Wheat crop becomes revisable as the snow
melts away, prices tend to decline. The risk premium from heaving
built into prices tends to erode quickly during February. During
March and April, as the crop develops, fear grips the trading
pits of Kansas City and Chicago and the price of Wheat tends to
rally on pollination concerns. After pollination the crop tends
to complete its heading, and is left to dry in the heat of summer.
Like other crops, Wheat uses most of its available resources
in building the head, so the root system tends to die and the
grass-like Wheat begins to dry in the fields. Excessive rains
and below normal temperatures after heading is complete have produced
minor rallies in June on fears that the Wheat Crop is too wet
and therefore will not have adequate protein content. But these
rallies tend to be little more than minor retracement during the
fall from the May highs to the pre harvest lows of mid July. The
Winter Wheat harvest typically takes place from late May through
Early September, with the bulk of the crop being harvested between
early June and mid July.
Excessive rains during harvest can slow down the harvest process,
though very rarely does yield suffer much in years with a protracted
harvest. The greatest damage to Winter Wheat during the spring
and summer is from disease. Hot and humid conditions create ideal
growing for the mold based diseases which have commonly afflicted
Wheat in recent years. However, outbreaks of Wheat diseases, such
as karnel bunt, have been very localized in recent years and probably
do not present a real danger to modern agriculture.
Like other grain markets, Winter Wheat futures tend to gain in
price when the crop is most vulnerable to damage. During emergence,
during dormancy when the crop is subject to heaving, and prior
to pollination. The old grain traders saying of " Grain Crops
are killed 3 times a year" is true for Winter Wheat as well:
. . . Once during the Fall when it is too hot/cold/wet/dry
for planting or the crop to emerge
. . . Once during the Winter on fear of heaving, or radical
changes in soil temperatures
. . . Once during the spring on fear that it is too hot/cold/wet/dry
for pollination
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