Agriculture News

Weekly export inspections for week ended Oct. 13 reported a notable figure for soybeans, however the current pace is falling considerably behind last year’s. Wheat inspections fell short, with corn just above low range.
Soybean futures pulled back overnight from their strong gains Wednesday, while wheat traded mildly higher after yesterday’s losses. Corn posted two-sided trade.
Basis for corn and soybeans continues to decline amid increased harvest and low water levels on the Mississippi River.
USDA’s 2022-23 ending stocks forecasts came in higher than expected for corn and wheat, while projected carryover was lower than traders anticipated.
USDA’s Oct. WASDE revealed an additional cut to the national soybean yield to 49.8 bu. per acre (bpa), while pre-report estimates averaged 50.5 bpa. The corn yield landed slightly above the average estimate at 171.9 bpa.
Corn, soybean and wheat futures faced mild selling pressure in relatively light overnight trade ahead of USDA’s October crop reports later this morning.
Weekly export inspections for week ended Oct. 6 reported corn, beans, and wheat within expectations, however corn and bean inspections are now notably behind last year’s, at 9.4% and 23% behind, respectively.
Corn, soybeans and wheat pulled back from Monday’s gains amid corrective selling and weakness in the crude oil market.
The 2022-23 domestic balance sheets will reflect Sept. 1 stocks and the final 2022 wheat crop estimate, along with any changes to this year’s corn, soybean and cotton crop forecasts.
Short-term trend turns up for crude oil.
Wheat futures led a price surge in the grain and soy markets overnight as escalating war concerns sparked supply concerns from the Black Sea region.