The Corn And Energy Price Link Could Tighten As U.S. Election Looms

 | Jul 20, 2020 19:39

 This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Ethanol prices rise with energy
  • Ethanol outperforms corn
  • The 2020 US election may cause lots of volatility in the biofuel over the coming months

Ethanol is a biofuel. In the United States, corn is the primary ingredient in the refining process. In Brazil, sugar cane is the input. The US is the world’s leading producer and exporter of corn, while Brazil is the top producer of free-market sugar. The two countries lead the world in ethanol output using excess agricultural commodity production.

Over the past years, corn’s role in US ethanol production served two purposes. Increased demand for corn was supportive of US farmers. At the same time, an ethanol blend in gasoline is supposed to be environmentally friendly, and it reduced dependence on crude oil from the Middle East.

Corn and ethanol share a bond in the US, as each can impact the other’s supply and demand fundamentals. The price of ethanol followed oil and gasoline prices lower during the massive selloff in February through April. Both ethanol and gasoline futures fell to lows in late March. Since then, the biofuel and the oil product have made significant comebacks. 

h2 Ethanol prices rise with energy/h2

After trading to a low of negative $40.32 per barrel on April 20, the price of nearby crude oil futures on NYMEX was over $80 per barrel higher at the end of last week, at above $41 on the active month August contract. Natural gas hit a low of $1.432 in late June and recovered to $1.718 on Friday, July 17. The ethanol price moved higher with the energy commodities.