The International Grains Council (IGC) has slightly revised down its estimate of total global grain production in 2019-20.
Lower production of wheat in the EU, Russia and Canada, of Chinese corn and of US sorghum will result overall in a fall of 8mn t, or 0.4pc, to 2.15bn t.
"A third successive contraction of global stocks is forecast at the end of 2019-20, with the rate of drawdown accelerating to 36m t", the IGC said.
It projects world grains trade to climb by 1pc year-on-year, to 370mn t. The IGC expects shipments of wheat, barley, sorghum and oats to rise, but corn trade to slow for the first time in 11 years as the EU reduces purchases.
The IGC revised down its estimate for global corn production from its June report, by 3mn t to 1.09bn t; it raised its forecast for trade of corn edged up by 1mn t to 163mn t, and lowered its forecast for corn consumption by 2mn t to 1.14bn t.
The IGC lowered its soybean production estimates for 2019-20 by 1mn t to 348mnt, largely on expectations for a smaller US harvest. This represents a drop by 4pc year-on-year, following record production in the previous year that was driven by large crops in Argentina and the US.
Rising consumption has led IGC to forecast a 20pc year-on-year fall in stocks in 2019-20, to 44mn t. And "on the basis of a slower pace of deliveries to China" the IGC forecast for soybean trade in 2018-19 was lowered slightly to 150mn t.
The IGC lowered its wheat production outlook for 2019-20 by 6mn t to 763mn t. Consumption was revised slightly lower to 755mn t.