Agriculture News
Soy complex futures are expected to lead a corrective rebound.
USDA reported net corn sales of 468,400 MT for 2022-23 and 470,800 MT for 2023-24, notably exceeding pre-report estimates.
Soybeans led a corrective rebound in the grain and soy markets overnight.
Corn and soybean basis are now both below the three-year averages.
USDA’s new-crop ending stocks forecasts for soybeans and wheat came in much higher than expected. The wheat crop estimate was also bigger than anticipated.
In its July WASDE, USDA slashed the corn yield by 4 bu., which put 2023-24 ending stocks near pre-report estimates. Its soybean yield projection was unchanged, leaving ending stocks well above pre-report estimates.
Soybeans are expected to trade sharply higher as traders prepare for what’s anticipated to be bullish changes to USDA’s new-crop balance sheet.
Soybean futures extended this week’s gains ahead of USDA’s reports during overnight trade. Corn followed to the upside, while wheat traded mostly lower.
Grain and soy futures are expected to open solidly higher after moderate to strong gains overnight.
Corn, soybean and spring wheat futures firmed amid followthrough buying overnight, while the winter wheat markets posted corrective gains.
The spring wheat CCI rating continued to decline.
USDA reported wheat inspections of 419,134 MT for week ended July 6, topping pre-report estimates, while corn inspections missed the respective range by nearly 160,000 MT.
Soy complex futures are expected to open sharply higher, with corn called firmer on spillover support.
Soybeans posted strong gains overnight, while corn and wheat followed to the upside. As
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Wheat futures are expected to lead losses in the grain and soy markets.
USDA reported weekly wheat sales of 405,800 MT for week ended June 29, while net corn sales rose 79% on the week to 251,700 MT. Soybean sales fell 17% week-over-week.