Weekly corn inspections during the week ended April 25 were down 435,000 MT from the previous week, which was revised 38,000 MT higher. Corn, wheat and soybean inspections were all within pre-report estimates.
Wheat futures led broad losses in the grain and soy complex during the overnight session as markets weakened amid technical selling and a lack of supportive news.
For the week ended Feb., USDA showed corn and wheat inspections up 230,000 MT and 112,000 from the previous week, while soybean inspections fell 420,000 MT after a 320,000 MT upward revision to last week's figure.
Corn and soybeans saw corrective gains overnight though saw increased selling into the break. Wheat favored the downside, though went into the break near unchanged.
Soybeans continue to lead weakness, giving up all of Thursday’s gains overnight, while corn followed to the downside. Wheat futures saw modest corrective gains overnight.
USDA showed soybean ending stocks rose 35 million bu. from January, while corn rose 10 million bu,. Meanwhile, 2023-24 global soybean carryover was notably higher than expectations.
During the week ended Feb. 1, USDA showed net soybean sales of 340,800 MT, short of pre-report estimates, while corn and wheat sales held steady week-over-week.
Corn futures fell to contract lows overnight, leading soybeans and wheat lower as well. Traders await Thursday’s USDA reports, which will give a fresh look into South American crop estimates and U.S. balance sheets.