Agriculture News

Corn, soybeans and wheat open the week under pressure
Short-term trends remain down for most grain and soy markets.
Corn, soybeans and wheat posted moderate to sharp losses during the overnight session.
No overnight grain trade. Grain and livestock markets resume trading at 8:30 a.m. CT.
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Corn plantings and June 1 stocks topped expectations.
USDA raised its estimate for corn acreage by nearly 1.5 million from the end of March, while soybean acres were lowered 400,000. Meanwhile, corn, soybean and wheat June 1 stocks were each above pre-report estimates.
Corn, soybeans and wheat posted mild corrective gains overnight amid light short-covering ahead of USDA’s reports later this morning.
In the wake of the heavy flooding in the northwestern Corn Belt, there have been a lot of questions about USDA’s methodology for assessing crop conditions. We’ve got the answer.
June 1 hog herd expanded 1.3% from year-ago, with the market hog inventory up 1.7%.
Cash winter wheat prices continue the seasonal price slide.
Soybeans and wheat are expected to open firmer, corn mixed.
Wheat sales during the week ended June 20 topped analysts’ pre-report range for the second straight week. Soybean sales fell 49% on the week, while soyoil saw net reductions, which were a marketing-year low.
While the acreage estimates will draw a lot of attention, quarterly stocks data has a history of producing major surprises, especially for corn.
Corn, soybeans and wheat held in tight ranges during the overnight session that saw two-sided trade.
Cash cattle prices surge to a record high last week.
Soybeans led a round of corrective gains in grain and soy futures during the overnight session.
Frozen meat stocks data suggests demand didn’t keep pace with supplies during May.
Corn, soybeans and wheat traded higher at points overnight but have adopted a mostly weaker tone this morning.
Weekly soybean inspections during the week ended June 20, rose modestly on the week and were near the upper end of the pre-report range, while corn and wheat inspections each declined from the previous week.
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