Agriculture News

Grain and livestock markets will reopen at 8:30 a.m. CT following the extended holiday weekend. Outside markets were price-negative, with crude oil weaker and the U.S. dollar sharply higher overnight.
Corn export inspections for week ended Dec. 22 were up on the week and short of the high end of expectations, while soybeans landed on the upper end of trade expectations, but trailed the previous week by 210,237 MT.
Short-term trend turns up for several markets, including corn, soyoil, SRW wheat and live cattle.
No overnight grain trade. Grain and livestock markets will reopen at 8:30 a.m. CT following the extended holiday weekend.
The Dec. 1 hog herd fell 1.8% from year-ago and was 210,000 head less than the average pre-report estimate implied.
The Dec. 1 feedlot inventory fell 2.6% from year-ago, the third straight month with a year-over-year decline.
Access this week’s newsletter here.
Corn, soybeans and wheat firmed after trading lower early in the overnight and are near their highs this morning.
Limited movement in cash corn and soybean prices.
Export sales data for week ended Dec. 15 showed soybeans falling short of expectations by 64,000 MT, with corn and wheat both low range. Cotton export sales reflected a nearly 90,000 RB net reduction for the week.
Corn, soybean and wheat futures held in tight ranges in a lightly traded overnight session.