Ethanol Climbs To Highest In A Month After Biofuels Plant Shuts
Source: By Aaron Clark, Bloomberg • Posted: Thursday, June 28, 2012
Futures gained as the plant, which has an annual capacity of 110 million gallons, was temporarily halted yesterday, a week after Valero closed its Albion, Nebraska, ethanol plant. Bill Day, a spokesman at company headquarters in San Antonio, said in an e-mail that Valero expects “to resume production once market conditions improve.”
Denatured ethanol for July delivery rose 3 cents, or 1.4 percent, to settle at $2.216 a gallon on the Chicago Board of Trade, the highest level since May 18. The increase was the fourth in a row. The biofuel today traded 8.2 percent below its average the last year of $2.414 a gallon.
“Ethanol is up today and it needs to be up because the margins have been poor,” said Christian Mayer, a market advisor at Northstar Commodity Investments LLC in Minneapolis. “The corn market has been going up significantly and so ethanol needs to work higher.”
Corn for December delivery climbed 9 cents, or 1.4 percent, to $6.33 a bushel on CBOT. Corn is the primary feedstock in U.S. ethanol production. Futures have surged as much as 30 percent since touching a 20-month low June 15 as hot, dry weather threatens U.S. yields.
In cash market trading, ethanol rose 3 cents to $2.275 a gallon in the U.S. Gulf and 2.5 cents to $2.35 on the West Coast. The biofuel advanced 3 cents to $2.27 in New York and 1.5 cents to $2.195 in Chicago.