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Do the Math On ExPress® Soybean Meal

Extruded Soy

Dr. Nabil Said and Dr. Dave Albin have written many blogs on the benefits of ExPress® soybean meal in regards to feeding efficiencies and digestibility advantages versus standard soybean meal (here and here).  There are significant advantages which will calculate in better profitability for the grower.  Examples are poultry growing faster while eating less, dairy cows producing more milk, laying hens producing larger eggs, etc.  As you can imagine, these are major positive impacts in any meat, milk or egg operation when using ExPress® soy instead of the commodity soybean meal protein source.

But in many places around the world there is another major advantage to using ExPress® versus commodity soy in animal’s diets and that is the basic cost of soybean meal.  If your location is far from a commodity soybean meal producer in a solvent plant, you may be faced with an extremely high cost ingredient.   Duncan Nesbitt wrote about basis (here) where he said, “The basis is the amount above or below the CBOT (Chicago Board of Trade) futures price that a commodity is trading for at a given location.  Another way to more simply think about this is how far do your local beans have to ship to a solvent plant and then be shipped back in the form of soybean meal?

Recently we have seen a number of Canadian producers see the benefit of this in deciding to process their own soy through the ExPress® system.  Basis in Central Canada is $67, meaning a $67 premium over CBOT pricing.  So for example if solvent soybean meal CBOT price is $400, the cost of the soybean meal in Central Canada is $467.  Western Canada is even more costly at $87 basis.  At the same time we have more and more soybean varieties capable of growing in or near Canada that can be accessed to process in an ExPress® plant.  Now these producers not only can save money, but have a better ingredient for their animal’s growth and production.

Another scenario where the math works is producing ExPress® in an area where the producer does not have local beans to buy, but must get the soybeans shipped to them from long distances.  We have set up major producers in Egypt and in Russia that are perfect examples of this. In this scenario the math works well again because of the value of the ExPress® soybean meal with 6-8% oil content and the value of the ExPress® crude oil produced in the process.  For Southern Russia here is how the numbers look:

Commodity Soybean Meal (solvent) Price            = $725 per ton

Raw Soybeans Price                                           = $660 per ton

ExPress Soybean Meal Price                               = $800 per ton

ExPress Crude Oil Price                                       = $950 per ton

As you can see in this example, the producer has $140 per ton margin to work with on the meal production and $290 per ton margin when selling the oil.

So do the math on not only the feeding and digestibility advantages, but also the pure cost and margin advantages of ExPress® soy processing versus buying commodity solvent extracted soybean meal.  You may be pleasantly surprised with the profit opportunity you have.

 

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