Agriculture News

Weekly export inspections for week ended Oct. 27 were delayed this morning due to technical issues, but revealed figures for corn, soybeans, and wheat all within expected ranges with soybeans near the top end.
Basis is better than average for corn and soybeans despite Mississippi River transportation slowdowns.
Corn and soybean futures found followthrough buying overnight while wheat futures rebounded as markets were supported by the recent sharp pullback in the U.S. dollar.
Food price forecasts continue to rise and are well above historical average rates.
Corn and wheat traded lower overnight on followthrough selling, while soybeans faced two-sided trade.
Beef stocks increased less than normal during September, though inventories were record-large for the month. Pork stocks declined contra-seasonally last month.
Weekly export inspections for week ended Oct. 20 revealed another week of sizable soybean inspections, at nearly 3 MMT, while wheat fell short of the expected range of 200,000-500,000 MT, and corn was as expected.
Grain and soy futures faced pressure from weak outside markets overnight.
All three categories matched or were close to the average pre-report estimates.
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Corn, soybean and wheat futures retreated from Thursday’s gains overnight amid renewed hopes for a Ukrainian grain export extension and pressure from outside markets.