NEW YORK/LONDON /SINGAPORE: From the heart of the US big farm belt to Colombia, Vietnam and Indonesia, livestock producers are snapping up wheat damaged by bad weather or low in protein, providing pigs and poultry with grain more often milled for making bread.

The increased global purchases of cheap, poor quality wheat for animal feed come as a combination of bumper crops and low prices increase its appeal compared to alternatives like corn.

“There’s a massive amount of wheat out there that didn’t make the grade,” said one US grain merchandiser, who spoke on condition of anonymity. “The next best option is to either carry it or find another mouth for it as feed.”

Farms in the United States, the Black Sea region, Europe and Australia have had bumper harvests, which are likely to push global wheat stocks to record levels for the third consecutive year in 2016/17, according to the US Department of Agriculture (USDA).

But quality problems have weighed on prices. Now wheat is eating into demand for corn - also a staple animal feed and already under pressure from its own ample global supplies.

The USDA last week hiked its estimate for global wheat consumption in the coming year by 13.3 million tonnes to the highest ever, “primarily on increased feed use” which the agency estimated at 144.42 million tonnes.

The last time so much wheat was used as feed was four years ago, when a harsh drought slashed US corn production.

This time around, bumper corn crops mean it is selling below benchmark-quality wheat, but discounts for damaged wheat and low protein make the difference. The USDA cut its forecast for global consumption of coarse grains, including corn, by 3.3 million tonnes.

Chicago Board of Trade corn is currently 65-75 cents per bushel cheaper than wheat. But low-protein or grain-damage discounts are more than $1 per bushel, a price cut of at least $36 per tonne, grain traders say.

“Wheat’s a great substitute for corn, there’s plenty of it, and it’s at $7 or $8 a tonne discount (to corn),” said a US grain export trader who did not want to be named because he is not authorized to speak to the media. “I’ve had some Colombians take it, and I’d love to sell them more.”

Colombia’s neighbor, Brazil, is an exception. It had its own feed wheat frenzy earlier this year when hog and poultry producers used wheat for the first time in a decade as corn prices soared following a severe drought. Now, with a huge corn harvest rolling in, Brazil no longer needs to use feed wheat.

Grain customers in the United States - from livestock producer Cargill to major domestic hog producer The Maschhoffs - are using more wheat for animals.

“We’re seeing feed manufacturers and livestock producers gravitate toward wheat because it makes sense economically,” said David Fairfield, senior vice president of feed services at the National Grain and Feed Association.

On the US East Coast, home to some of the country’s biggest pork production, ships carrying UK feed wheat have been unloading volumes not seen in years, as a weak pound and cheap freight give it a competitive edge, said Jack Watts at Britain’s Agriculture and Horticulture Development Board.

About 63,000 tonnes of wheat arrived from Britain in May, according to the latest customs data - the largest shipments since 2011/12.

But western European supplies of rain-damaged milling wheat find ready markets close to home. Black Sea export shipments are discounted $25 a tonne to corn, compared with $7 premiums in February.

“You cannot substitute corn 100 percent, but I think the animal feed manufacturers and importers will take wheat content to the limit,” said a German trader who asked not to be named. Another German trader, who also requested anonymity, said demand for feed wheat has risen sharply from some of the big Asian importers, such as South Korea and Indonesia. The latter has already slapped controls on imports in a bid to encourage feed mills to use domestic corn.

“Korean importers have told me that, in the present price constellation, they will switch to more feed wheat tenders from corn in coming weeks,” this German trader said. “In South Korea alone, this could result in about 150,000 tonnes a month of corn imports being switched to feed wheat.”—Reuters