What the Futures!

StatsCan Shock: Canola Acres Came in Big

28 min · I går
episode StatsCan Shock: Canola Acres Came in Big cover

Beskrivelse

StatsCan dropped new acreage numbers, and the canola market had to digest a bigger-than-expected number fast. In this Cuppa Coffee livestream, Ryan Denis is joined by Brian Comeault to break down what the StatsCan report means for canola, spring wheat, barley, peas, oats, lentils, and Prairie crop marketing decisions. They also touch on urea summer fill, wet crop conditions, canola crush demand, USDA acreage risk, and why buying out grain contracts can backfire when emotions are running high. If you’re trying to make better grain marketing decisions through a volatile summer, this episode is worth watching before your next move. Guest: Brian Comeault Host: Ryan Denis, What the Futures Podcast Sponsored by Land for Rent: https://www.landforrent.com/ [https://landforrent.com/] Ryan Denis / Strategy Session: https://www.ryandenis.ca/ [https://www.ryandenis.ca/]

Kommentarer

0

Vær den første til at kommentere

Tilmeld dig nu og bliv en del af What the Futures!-fællesskabet!

Kom i gang

1 måned kun 9 kr.

Derefter 99 kr. / måned · Opsig når som helst.

  • Podcasts kun på Podimo
  • 20 lydbogstimer pr. måned
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle episoder

95 episoder

episode StatsCan Shock: Canola Acres Came in Big cover

StatsCan Shock: Canola Acres Came in Big

StatsCan dropped new acreage numbers, and the canola market had to digest a bigger-than-expected number fast. In this Cuppa Coffee livestream, Ryan Denis is joined by Brian Comeault to break down what the StatsCan report means for canola, spring wheat, barley, peas, oats, lentils, and Prairie crop marketing decisions. They also touch on urea summer fill, wet crop conditions, canola crush demand, USDA acreage risk, and why buying out grain contracts can backfire when emotions are running high. If you’re trying to make better grain marketing decisions through a volatile summer, this episode is worth watching before your next move. Guest: Brian Comeault Host: Ryan Denis, What the Futures Podcast Sponsored by Land for Rent: https://www.landforrent.com/ [https://landforrent.com/] Ryan Denis / Strategy Session: https://www.ryandenis.ca/ [https://www.ryandenis.ca/]

I går28 min
episode Farmers Are Locking In 2027 Diesel at 64¢/L (Here’s How) cover

Farmers Are Locking In 2027 Diesel at 64¢/L (Here’s How)

In this episode of What The Futures, Ryan Denis sits down with Lorelei Gress from Fuel Nexus to discuss diesel markets, fuel planning, pre-purchasing fuel, locking in fuel budgets, and why some farmers are already planning their 2027 fuel strategy. They break down real-world examples that show fuel savings, discuss whether diesel prices are likely to decline, and explain how producers can protect themselves against volatile energy markets. * Diesel price outlook * WTI crude oil trends * Fuel budgeting for harvest • Pre-buying fuel * Cost of borrowing money for fuel purchases * Fuel Nexus fuel plans • Diesel market volatility * Farm financial planning * Fuel savings examples * Ag in Motion Guest: Lorelei Gress Fuel Nexus https://www.linkedin.com/in/lorelei-gress-yeboah-37776073/ [https://www.linkedin.com/in/lorelei-gress-yeboah-37776073/]

26. juni 202637 min
episode Fertilizer Dropped. Is $800 Canola Still Alive? cover

Fertilizer Dropped. Is $800 Canola Still Alive?

Fertilizer prices have finally come down, but the farm decisions are not getting any easier. In this Cuppa Coffee livestream from What the Futures Podcast, Sarah Cochet fills in for Ryan Denis and talks with Josh Uhrich of Bunge about urea prices, flooded acres, canola contracts, $800 canola, grain marketing decisions, weather risk, and prairie elevator competition. They cover whether farmers should be looking at summer fill urea, what flooded acres mean for canola contract risk, what it would take for canola to push back toward $800, and why grain marketing decisions need to be made farm by farm. Guest: * Sarah Cochet, Trigger Grain Marketing * Josh Uhrich, Bunge Links mentioned: Ryan’s fertilizer episode with Josh Linville: https://youtu.be/XkkvZ4aDMP4?si=0DR7tStAmIR9AelV [https://youtu.be/XkkvZ4aDMP4?si=0DR7tStAmIR9AelV] ‍ Follow on Instagram and X for more market insights. https://www.instagram.com/whatthefuturespod/ https://www.x.com/wtfuturespod Email Ryan: ryan@whatthefuturespodcast.ca What the Futures Podcast Website: https://www.whatthefuturespodcast.ca Thanks to our Sponsors John Deere https://www.operationscenter.deere.com/ UPL https://www.uplcorp.com/ BrettYoung https://www.brettyoung.ca/

23. juni 202618 min
episode The $800 Canola Mistake Farmers Keep Making cover

The $800 Canola Mistake Farmers Keep Making

Canola hit $800, then pulled back toward $730. So why do farmers feel better now? In this episode of What the Futures Podcast, Ryan Denis breaks down the emotional side of crop marketing, why farmers often feel worse during a rally than after a pullback, and how margin calls, hedges, canola puts, old crop wheat, acreage reports, diesel, fertilizer and summer weather risk all fit into the end-of-June marketing plan. Ryan also talks through old crop wheat sales, softening oat, barley and pea bids, new crop review, harvest delivery planning, canola acreage risk, and why farmers need to park emotion before the next market move. What the Futures Podcast: https://www.whatthefuturespodcast.ca/ [https://www.whatthefuturespodcast.ca/] Ryan Denis: https://www.ryandenis.ca/ [https://www.ryandenis.ca/] Strategy Room: https://www.ryandenis.ca/strategy-room [https://www.ryandenis.ca/strategy-room] Crop Marketing Made Cool Conference 2026: https://www.ryandenis.ca/2026-conference [https://www.ryandenis.ca/2026-conference] Ag in Motion: https://aginmotion.ca/ [https://aginmotion.ca/] UPL WAVE Biostimulant: https://www.uplcorp.com/ca/product-details/wave-biostimulant [https://www.uplcorp.com/ca/product-details/wave-biostimulant] UPL ROXAR Fungicide: https://www.upl-ltd.com/ca/product-details/roxar [https://www.upl-ltd.com/ca/product-details/roxar] BrettYoung: https://brettyoung.ca/ [https://brettyoung.ca/] BrettYoung Knowledge Hub: https://brettyoung.ca/agricultural-seed-crop-inputs-canada-portal/knowledge-hub/ [https://brettyoung.ca/agricultural-seed-crop-inputs-canada-portal/knowledge-hub/] Cows in Control: https://cowsincontrol.com/ [https://cowsincontrol.com/] FBN: https://www.fbn.com/ [https://www.fbn.com/] Trigger Grain: https://triggergrain.ca/ [https://triggergrain.ca/] RBC / Tyler Durst: https://wmc.rbcwealthmanagement.com/the-simpson/caputo-group/ [https://wmc.rbcwealthmanagement.com/the-simpson/caputo-group/] Email Ryan: ryan@whatthefuturespodcast.ca [ryan@whatthefuturespodcast.ca]

22. juni 202632 min
episode Canadian Prairies Summer Forecast: Will July Heat Hurt Crops? cover

Canadian Prairies Summer Forecast: Will July Heat Hurt Crops?

BAM Weather meteorologist Brett Waltz joins Ryan Denis to break down the latest Prairie weather outlook and explain why one of the strongest El Niño events on record could shape crop conditions across Western Canada and the U.S. Will July bring the heat everyone fears? Is drought still a risk? And what does the “horseshoe weather pattern” mean for spraying, crop development, and yield potential? Brett shares his outlook for June, July, August, and even early harvest season. Links & Resources Links mentioned: What the Futures Podcast: https://www.whatthefuturespodcast.ca/ Ryan Denis: https://www.ryandenis.ca/ Ryan’s email list: https://www.ryandenis.ca/subscribe Strategy Room: https://www.ryandenis.ca/strategy-room Lunch Box Crew: https://www.ryandenis.ca/lunch-box-crew Crop Marketing Made Cool Conference: https://www.ryandenis.ca/2026-conference UPL Wave Biostimulant: https://www.uplcorp.com/ca/product-details/wave-biostimulant BAM Weather: https://bamwx.com/ Bret Walts: https://x.com/BretWaltsWx Bret Walts LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/bretwaltswx Futures text updates / questions for Ryan: ryan@whatthefuturespodcast.ca #Weather #Farming #Agriculture #Canola #Wheat #ElNino #PrairieWeather #CropMarketing #WhatTheFutures

19. juni 202631 min